A role for the insular cortex in long-term memory for context-evoked drug craving in rats
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2012Metadata
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Contreras, Marco
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A role for the insular cortex in long-term memory for context-evoked drug craving in rats
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Drug craving critically depends on the function of the interoceptive insular cortex, and may be triggered by contextual cues. However, the role of the insula in the long-term memory linking context with drug craving remains unknown. Such a memory trace probably resides in some neocortical region, much like other declarative memories. Studies in humans and rats suggest that the insula may include such a region. Rats chronically implanted with bilateral injection cannulae into the high-order rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) or the primary interoceptive posterior insula (pIC) were conditioned to prefer the initially aversive compartment of a 2-compartment place preference apparatus by repeatedly pairing it to amphetamine. We found a reversible but long-lasting loss (ca. 24 days) of amphetamine-conditioned place preference (CPP) and a decreased expression in the insula of zif268, a crucial protein in memory reconsolidation, when anisomycin (ANI) was microinjected into the RAIC immed
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/165622
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2012.59
ISSN: 0893133X
1740634X
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Neuropsychopharmacology, Volumen 37, Issue 9, 2018, Pages 2101-2108
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