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Bile diversion, a bariatric surgery, and bile acid signaling reduce central cocaine reward.
oleh: India A Reddy, Nicholas K Smith, Kevin Erreger, Dipanwita Ghose, Christine Saunders, Daniel J Foster, Brandon Turner, Amanda Poe, Vance L Albaugh, Owen McGuinness, Troy A Hackett, Brad A Grueter, Naji N Abumrad, Charles Robb Flynn, Aurelio Galli
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-07-01 |
Deskripsi
The gut-to-brain axis exhibits significant control over motivated behavior. However, mechanisms supporting this communication are poorly understood. We reveal that a gut-based bariatric surgery chronically elevates systemic bile acids and attenuates cocaine-induced elevations in accumbal dopamine. Notably, this surgery reduces reward-related behavior and psychomotor sensitization to cocaine. Utilizing a knockout mouse model, we have determined that a main mediator of these post-operative effects is the Takeda G protein-coupled bile acid receptor (TGR5). Viral restoration of TGR5 in the nucleus accumbens of TGR5 knockout animals is sufficient to restore cocaine reward, centrally localizing this TGR5-mediated modulation. These findings define TGR5 and bile acid signaling as pharmacological targets for the treatment of cocaine abuse and reveal a novel mechanism of gut-to-brain communication.