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The microbial community dynamics of cocaine sensitization in two behaviorally divergent strains of collaborative cross mice
Authors:Thi Dong Binh Tran  Christian Monroy Hernandez  Hoan Nguyen  Susan Wright  Center for Systems Neurogenetics of Addiction  Lisa M Tarantino  Elissa J Chesler  George M Weinstock  Yanjiao Zhou  Jason A Bubier
Institution:1. The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut, USA;2. The Jackson Laboratory for Mammalian Genetics, Bar Harbor, Maine, USA;3. National Institute of Drug Abuse, Rockville, Maryland, USA;4. Department of Genetics, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA;5. School of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, USA
Abstract:The gut-brain axis is increasingly recognized as an important pathway involved in cocaine use disorder. Microbial products of the murine gut have been shown to affect striatal gene expression, and depletion of the microbiome by antibiotic treatment alters cocaine-induced behavioral sensitization in C57BL/6J male mice. Some reports suggest that cocaine-induced behavioral sensitization is correlated with drug self-administration behavior in mice. Here, we profile the composition of the naïve microbiome and its response to cocaine sensitization in two collaborative cross (CC) strains. These strains display extremely divergent behavioral responses to cocaine sensitization. A high-responding strain, CC004/TauUncJ (CC04), has a gut microbiome that contains a greater amount of Lactobacillus than the cocaine-nonresponsive strain CC041/TauUncJ (CC41). The gut microbiome of CC41 is characterized by an abundance of Eisenbergella, Robinsonella and Ruminococcus. In response to cocaine, CC04 has an increased Barnsiella population, while the gut microbiome of CC41 displays no significant changes. PICRUSt functional analysis of the functional potential of the gut microbiome in CC04 shows a significant number of potential gut-brain modules altered after exposure to cocaine, specifically those encoding for tryptophan synthesis, glutamine metabolism, and menaquinone synthesis (vitamin K2). Depletion of the microbiome by antibiotic treatment revealed an altered cocaine-sensitization response following antibiotics in female CC04 mice. Depleting the microbiome by antibiotic treatment in males revealed increased infusions for CC04 during a cocaine intravenous self-administration dose–response curve. Together these data suggest that genetic differences in cocaine-related behaviors may involve the microbiome.
Keywords:addiction-related behavior  cocaine sensitization  cocaine-use disorder  collaborative cross  microbiome  recombinant inbred strains
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