M. Scott Bowers
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by M. Scott Bowers.
Neuron | 2008
Billy T. Chen; M. Scott Bowers; Miquel Martin; F. Woodward Hopf; Anitra M. Guillory; Regina M. Carelli; Jonathan Chou; Antonello Bonci
Persistent drug-seeking behavior is hypothesized to co-opt the brains natural reward-motivational system. Although ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine (DA) neurons represent a crucial component of this system, the synaptic adaptations underlying natural rewards and drug-related motivation have not been fully elucidated. Here, we show that self-administration of cocaine, but not passive cocaine infusions, produced a persistent potentiation of VTA excitatory synapses, which was still present after 3 months abstinence. Further, enhanced synaptic function in VTA was evident even after 3 weeks of extinction training. Food or sucrose self-administration induced only a transient potentiation of VTA glutamatergic signaling. Our data show that synaptic function in VTA DA neurons is readily but reversibly enhanced by natural reward-seeking behavior, while voluntary cocaine self-administration induced a persistent synaptic enhancement that is resistant to behavioral extinction. Such persistent synaptic potentiation in VTA DA neurons may represent a fundamental cellular phenomenon driving pathological drug-seeking behavior.
Science | 2008
Garret D. Stuber; Marianne Klanker; Bram de Ridder; M. Scott Bowers; Ruud N.J.M.A. Joosten; Matthijs G.P. Feenstra; Antonello Bonci
Using sensory information for the prediction of future events is essential for survival. Midbrain dopamine neurons are activated by environmental cues that predict rewards, but the cellular mechanisms that underlie this phenomenon remain elusive. We used in vivo voltammetry and in vitro patch-clamp electrophysiology to show that both dopamine release to reward predictive cues and enhanced synaptic strength onto dopamine neurons develop over the course of cue-reward learning. Increased synaptic strength was not observed after stable behavioral responding. Thus, enhanced synaptic strength onto dopamine neurons may act to facilitate the transformation of neutral environmental stimuli to salient reward-predictive cues.
Neuron | 2004
M. Scott Bowers; Krista McFarland; Russell W. Lake; Yuri K. Peterson; Christopher C. Lapish; Mary Lee Gregory; Stephen M. Lanier; Peter W. Kalivas
Chronic cocaine administration reduces G protein signaling efficacy. Here, we report that the expression of AGS3, which binds to GialphaGDP and inhibits GDP dissociation, was upregulated in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) during late withdrawal from repeated cocaine administration. Increased AGS3 was mimicked in the PFC of drug-naive rats by microinjecting a peptide containing the Gialpha binding domain (GPR) of AGS3 fused to the cell permeability domain of HIV-Tat. Infusion of Tat-GPR mimicked the phenotype of chronic cocaine-treated rats by manifesting sensitized locomotor behavior and drug seeking and by increasing glutamate transmission in nucleus accumbens. By preventing cocaine withdrawal-induced AGS3 expression with antisense oligonucleotides, signaling through Gialpha was normalized, and both cocaine-induced relapse to drug seeking and locomotor sensitization were prevented. When antisense oligonucleotide infusion was discontinued, drug seeking and sensitization were restored. It is proposed that AGS3 gates the expression of cocaine-induced plasticity by regulating G protein signaling in the PFC.
Nature Neuroscience | 2006
Miquel Martin; Billy T. Chen; F. Woodward Hopf; M. Scott Bowers; Antonello Bonci
The core and shell of the nucleus accumbens have critical, differential roles in drug-dependent behaviors. Here we show that operant cocaine self-administration inhibits long-term depression (LTD) in both structures after 1 d of abstinence. However, after 21 d of abstinence, LTD was abolished exclusively in the nucleus accumbens core of cocaine self-administering rats, suggesting that voluntary cocaine self-administration induced long-lasting neuroadaptations in the core that could underlie drug-seeking behavior and relapse.
Neuron | 2010
M. Scott Bowers; Billy T. Chen; Antonello Bonci
Experience-dependent plasticity at excitatory synapses of the mesocorticolimbic system is a fundamental brain mechanism that enables adaptation to an ever-changing environment. These synaptic responses are critical for the planning and execution of adaptive behaviors that maximize survival. The mesocorticolimbic system mediates procurement of positive reinforcers such as food and sex; however, drugs of abuse resculpt this crucial circuitry to promote compulsive drug-seeking behavior. This review will discuss the long-term changes in glutamatergic neurotransmission that occur within the mesolimbic system following cocaine exposure. In addition, we will examine how these long-lasting neuroadaptations may drive the pathology of psychostimulant addiction. Finally, we review clinical trials that highlight antagonists at excitatory AMPA receptors as promising targets against cocaine abuse.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2003
M. Scott Bowers; Peter W. Kalivas
Astrocytes actively participate in synaptic plasticity and respond to insult or metabotropic glutamate receptor activation with increased expression of the intermediate filament glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Extended withdrawal from repeated cocaine administration induces many forms of neuroplasticity. The present study with rats utilized a 3‐week withdrawal period from daily cocaine administration (i.p.; 7 days) to investigate whether astrocytes participate in cocaine‐mediated plasticity observed in brain nuclei associated with addiction. Following the 3‐week withdrawal period, immunoblotting revealed increased GFAP expression in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and in the shell and core compartments of the nucleus accumbens (NAshell and NAcore). Upregulation of GFAP did not occur in the striatum or in any brain region tested following shorter withdrawal times from repeated cocaine (24 h or 1 week) or following 2‐h withdrawal from an acute cocaine injection (30 mg/kg i.p.). However, GFAP expression increased following a 3‐week withdrawal from a single cocaine injection selectively in the NAshell. Cell counts revealed that astrocyte cell number increased only in the NAcore while immunoblots of a marker for immature or reactive astrocytes, vimentin, showed an increase only in the PFC following the 3‐week withdrawal. Taken together, these results suggest that altered intermediate filament expression within forebrain astrocytes may be a significant part of the plasticity occurring during withdrawal from repeated cocaine. Furthermore, the increase in GFAP may arise from regionally distinct mechanisms, with the NAcore relying more on cell proliferation while the PFC relies on a larger reactive astrocyte population.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
M. Scott Bowers; F. Woodward Hopf; Jonathan Chou; Anitra M. Guillory; Shao-Ju Chang; Patricia H. Janak; Antonello Bonci
Approximately 90% of alcoholics relapse within 4 years, in part because of an enhanced motivation to seek alcohol (EtOH). A novel G protein modulator (Gpsm1/AGS3) was up-regulated in the rat nucleus accumbens core (NAcore) but not in other limbic nuclei during abstinence from operant EtOH self-administration. Furthermore, NAcore AGS3 knockdown reduced EtOH seeking to pre-abstinence levels in a novel rat model of compulsive, human EtOH seeking. AGS3 can both inhibit G protein Giα-mediated signaling and stimulate Gβγ-mediated signaling. Accordingly, sequestration of Gβγ, but not Giα knockdown, significantly reduced EtOH seeking to pre-abstinence levels. Thus, AGS3 and Gβγ are hypothesized to gate the uncontrolled motivation to seek EtOH during abstinence. AGS3 up-regulation during abstinence may be a key determinant of the transition from social consumption to compulsion-like seeking during relapse.
Neuron | 2010
F. Woodward Hopf; M. Scott Bowers; Shao-Ju Chang; Billy T. Chen; Miguel Martin; Taban Seif; Saemi L. Cho; Kay M. Tye; Antonello Bonci
The cellular mechanisms underlying pathological alcohol seeking remain poorly understood. Here, we show an enhancement of nucleus accumbens (NAcb) core action potential firing ex vivo after protracted abstinence from alcohol but not sucrose self-administration. Increased firing is associated with reduced small-conductance calcium-activated potassium channel (SK) currents and decreased SK3 but not SK2 subunit protein expression. Furthermore, SK activation ex vivo produces greater firing suppression in NAcb core neurons from alcohol- versus sucrose-abstinent rats. Accordingly, SK activation in the NAcb core significantly reduces alcohol but not sucrose seeking after abstinence. In contrast, NAcb shell and lateral dorsal striatal firing ex vivo are not altered after abstinence from alcohol, and SK activation in these regions has little effect on alcohol seeking. Thus, decreased NAcb core SK currents and increased excitability represents a critical mechanism that facilitates motivation to seek alcohol after abstinence.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014
Cecilia Bull; Kelen Freitas; Shiping Zou; Ryan S. Poland; Wahab A. Syed; Daniel J. Urban; Sabrina C. Minter; Keith L Shelton; Kurt F. Hauser; S. Stevens Negus; Pamela E. Knapp; M. Scott Bowers
Our understanding of the active role that astrocytes play in modulating neuronal function and behavior is rapidly expanding, but little is known about the role that astrocytes may play in drug-seeking behavior for commonly abused substances. Given that the nucleus accumbens is critically involved in substance abuse and motivation, we sought to determine whether nucleus accumbens astrocytes influence the motivation to self-administer ethanol following abstinence. We found that the packing density of astrocytes that were expressing glial fibrillary acidic protein increased in the nucleus accumbens core (NAcore) during abstinence from EtOH self-administration. No change was observed in the nucleus accumbens shell. This increased NAcore astrocyte density positively correlated with the motivation for ethanol. Astrocytes can communicate with one another and influence neuronal activity through gap-junction hemichannels. Because of this, the effect of blocking gap-junction hemichannels on the motivation for ethanol was examined. The motivation to self-administer ethanol after 3 weeks abstinence was increased following microinjection of gap-junction hemichannel blockers into the NAcore at doses that block both neuronal and astrocytic channels. In contrast, no effect was observed following microinjection of doses that are not thought to block astrocytic channels or following microinjection of either dose into the nucleus accumbens shell. Additionally, the motivation for sucrose after 3 weeks abstinence was unaffected by NAcore gap-junction hemichannel blockers. Next, Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs) were selectively expressed in NAcore astrocytes to test the effect of astrocyte stimulation. DREADD activation increased cytosolic calcium in primary astrocytes, facilitated responding for rewarding brain stimulation, and reduced the motivation for ethanol after 3 weeks abstinence. This is the first work to modulate drug-seeking behavior with astrocyte-specific DREADDs. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that NAcore astrocytes can shape the motivation to self-administer ethanol; suggesting that the development of ligands which selectively stimulate astrocytes may be a successful strategy to abate ethanol-seeking behavior.
Biological Psychiatry | 2009
Matthew J. Wanat; Dennis R. Sparta; F. Woodward Hopf; M. Scott Bowers; Miriam Melis; Antonello Bonci
BACKGROUND Genetic factors and previous alcohol experience influence alcohol consumption in both humans and rodents. Specifically, a prior experience with ethanol increases ethanol intake in both ethanol-preferring C57BL/6 (C57) and ethanol non-preferring DBA/2 (DBA) mice. Whereas the ventral tegmental area (VTA) importantly regulates dopamine levels and ethanol intake, it is unknown whether ethanol experience differentially alters synaptic properties of VTA dopamine neurons in ethanol-preferring and non-preferring mice. METHODS The properties of excitatory and inhibitory inputs and the ability to elicit long-term potentiation (LTP) were assessed with whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in VTA dopamine neurons from C57 and DBA mice 24 hours after a single ethanol (2 g/kg, IP) or equivalent saline injection. RESULTS Ethanol exposure increased gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) release onto VTA dopamine neurons in DBA mice, as previously observed in C57 mice. However, a single ethanol exposure reduced alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid receptor (AMPAR) and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) function and LTP in VTA dopamine neurons from DBA but not C57 mice. CONCLUSIONS A single ethanol exposure selectively reduced glutamate receptor function in VTA dopamine neurons from the ethanol non-preferring DBA strain but enhanced GABA signaling in both C57 and DBA strains. These results support the notion that VTA dopamine neurons are a central target of ethanol-induced neural plasticity, which could contribute to ethanol consumption. Furthermore, these findings highlight the possible need for specialized therapeutic interventions for alcoholism based on individual intrinsic differences.