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Cross-generational THC Exposure Weakly Attenuates Cocaine's Rewarding Effects in Adult Male Offspring

•Cross-generational THC exposure had no effect on cocaine locomotor sensitization in offspring•Cocaine self-administration was attenuated during 20% of acquisition in F1-THC subjects•No differences emerged based on parental history under an FR5, FR10, or PR schedule•Dose-response, extinction and rei...

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Published in:Physiology & behavior 2020-12, Vol.227, p.113164-113164, Article 113164
Main Authors: Hempel, Briana J., Crissman, Madeline E., Imanalieva, Aikerim, Melkumyan, Mariam, Winston, Chloe A., Riley, Anthony L.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Cross-generational THC exposure had no effect on cocaine locomotor sensitization in offspring•Cocaine self-administration was attenuated during 20% of acquisition in F1-THC subjects•No differences emerged based on parental history under an FR5, FR10, or PR schedule•Dose-response, extinction and reinstatement responding was comparable across conditions Adolescents represent a large demographic of marijuana consumers. Regrettably, use during this developmental period has been associated with above average health risks. A growing body of evidence suggests that adolescent drug use in the lifetime of a parent can modify behavior and neurochemistry in descendants without direct exposure. The current study was designed to evaluate the effects of pre-conception THC during adolescence on vulnerability to cocaine in adult male offspring. Male and female rats were given an intermittent THC (0 or 1.5 mg/kg) exposure regimen during the adolescent window and mated with drug group conspecifics in adulthood. F1-THC and F1-Veh pups were cross fostered to drug naïve control dams. In Experiment 1, adult offspring underwent cocaine (0 or 15 mg/kg) locomotor sensitization procedures and showed no effect of parental THC exposure on locomotor activity. In Experiment 2, intravenous catheters were implanted and subjects were tested under a number of reinforcement schedules with cocaine (FR1, FR5, FR10, PR, dose-response, extinction, cue + stress induced reinstatement). F1-THC subjects exhibited a slight decrease in cocaine responding during acquisition and a more rapid extinction, but they failed to produce significant differences on any other measure. These findings indicate that adolescent cannabis use likely has minimal effects on cocaine abuse liability in the next generation.
ISSN:0031-9384
1873-507X
DOI:10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113164