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Extreme Phenotypic Diversity in Operant Responding for an Intravenous Cocaine or Saline Infusion in the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel

Bagley, J. R.; Khan, A. H.; Smith, D. J.; Jentsch, J. D.

2021-02-05 animal behavior and cognition
10.1101/2021.02.03.429584 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Cocaine self-administration is complexly determined trait, and a substantial proportion of individual differences in cocaine use is determined by genetic variation. Cocaine intravenous self-administration (IVSA) procedures in laboratory animals provide opportunities to prospectively investigate neurogenetic influences on the acquisition of voluntary cocaine use. Large and genetically diverse mouse populations, including the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel (HMDP), have been developed for forward genetic approaches that can reveal genetic variants that influence traits like cocaine IVSA. This population enables high resolution and well-powered genome wide association studies, as well as the discovery of genetic correlations. Here, we provide information on cocaine (or saline - as a control) IVSA in 65 strains of the HMDP. We found cocaine IVSA to be substantially heritable in this population, with strain-level intake ranging for near zero to >25 mg/kg/session. Though saline IVSA was also found to be heritable, a very modest genetic correlation between cocaine and saline IVSA indicates that operant responding for the cocaine reinforcer was influenced by a substantial proportion of unique genetic variants. These data indicate that the HMDP is suitable for forward genetic approaches for the analysis of cocaine IVSA, and this project has also led to the discovery of reference strains with extreme cocaine IVSA phenotypes, revealing them as polygenic models of risk and resilience to cocaine reinforcement. This is part of an ongoing effort to characterize genetic and genomic variation that moderates cocaine IVSA, which may, in turn, provide a more comprehensive understanding of cocaine risk genetics and neurobiology.

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