
Nick Gayliard
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David Barker
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
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Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
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University of Illinois at Chicago
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University of Washington
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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Wake Forest University School of Medicine
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Papers by Nick Gayliard
neurobiological changes from acute to chronic drug use. However, little is known about the exact progression of changes in functional
striatal processing as drug intake persists. We sampled single-unit activity in the NAc and DLS throughout 24 daily sessions
of chronic long-access cocaine self-administration, and longitudinally tracked firing rates (FR) specifically during the operant
response, an upward vertical head movement. A total of 103 neurons were held longitudinally and immunohistochemically localised
to either NAc Medial Shell (n = 29), NAc Core (n = 30), or DLS (n = 54). We modeled changes representative of each category
as a whole. Results demonstrated that FRs of DLS Head Movement neurons were significantly increased relative to
baseline during all sessions, while FRs of DLS Uncategorised neurons were significantly reduced relative to baseline during all
sessions. NAc Shell neurons’ FRs were also significantly decreased relative to baseline during all sessions while FRs of NAc
Core neurons were reduced relative to baseline only during training days 1–18 but were not significantly reduced on the remaining
sessions (19–24). The data suggest that all striatal subregions show changes in FR during the operant response relative to baseline,
but longitudinal changes in response firing patterns were observed only in the NAc Core, suggesting that this region is particularly
susceptible to plastic changes induced by abused drugs.
neurobiological changes from acute to chronic drug use. However, little is known about the exact progression of changes in functional
striatal processing as drug intake persists. We sampled single-unit activity in the NAc and DLS throughout 24 daily sessions
of chronic long-access cocaine self-administration, and longitudinally tracked firing rates (FR) specifically during the operant
response, an upward vertical head movement. A total of 103 neurons were held longitudinally and immunohistochemically localised
to either NAc Medial Shell (n = 29), NAc Core (n = 30), or DLS (n = 54). We modeled changes representative of each category
as a whole. Results demonstrated that FRs of DLS Head Movement neurons were significantly increased relative to
baseline during all sessions, while FRs of DLS Uncategorised neurons were significantly reduced relative to baseline during all
sessions. NAc Shell neurons’ FRs were also significantly decreased relative to baseline during all sessions while FRs of NAc
Core neurons were reduced relative to baseline only during training days 1–18 but were not significantly reduced on the remaining
sessions (19–24). The data suggest that all striatal subregions show changes in FR during the operant response relative to baseline,
but longitudinal changes in response firing patterns were observed only in the NAc Core, suggesting that this region is particularly
susceptible to plastic changes induced by abused drugs.