Journal of Pharmacological Sciences
Online ISSN : 1347-8648
Print ISSN : 1347-8613
ISSN-L : 1347-8613
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Immunosuppression Induced by a Conditioned Stimulus Associated With Cocaine Self-Administration
Marta KuberaMalgorzata FilipBoguslawa BudziszewskaAgnieszka Basta-KaimKarolina WydraMonika LeskiewiczMagdalena RegulskaLucylla Jaworska-FeilEdmund PrzegalinskiAnna MachowskaWladyslaw Lason
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2008 Volume 107 Issue 4 Pages 361-369

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Abstract

Cocaine addiction is known to impair immune system function, but the effects of repeated treatment with cocaine in a self-administration model, its withdrawal as well as reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior on cell-mediated immunity are not well known. Cocaine self-administered for 18 days induced a significant increase in spleen weight, plasma corticosterone levels, interleukin (IL)-10, and tumor necrosis factor-α production, while concanavalin A–stimulated proliferation responses of peripheral blood T-lymphocytes and interferon-γ production by splenic lymphocytes were not altered. After 10 days withdrawal from cocaine, reinstatement of cocaine seeking behavior induced either by a priming dose of the drug (unconditioned stimulus), by cue previously associated with cocaine self-administration (conditioned stimuli), or by both these stimuli evoked similar changes in several immunological parameters, for example, a decrease in relative spleen weight, proliferative activity of splenocytes, and their ability to produce IL-10. The results showed that the cue previously associated with cocaine suppressed some parameters of cell-mediated immunity to the same degree as re-exposure to cocaine. The present study provides the first evidence that alterations of immune status can be conditioned by environmental stimuli paired with cocaine administration.

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© The Japanese Pharmacological Society 2008
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