Adolescent nicotine administration impacts working memory and reversal learning but not cognitive flexibility
- PMID: 36426795
- DOI: 10.1002/dev.22343
Adolescent nicotine administration impacts working memory and reversal learning but not cognitive flexibility
Abstract
There has been increased interest in early exposure to nicotine through tobacco products and vaping specifically as it relates to addiction, yet fewer studies have focused on whether behavioral effects resulting from early nicotine exposure may persist into adulthood. Our experiments tested the hypothesis that exposure to nicotine during adolescence would impair selective aspects of behavioral cognition in rodents in adulthood. Male and female adolescent rats received either nicotine (0.4 mg/kg) or vehicle injections (intraperitoneal) once daily for 10 days (PND 29-38) followed by a washout period before behavioral testing. Animals were followed in a longitudinal design and evaluated on a battery of both behavioral and cognitive tasks during adulthood (PND 90+) that included locomotor activity, working memory (novel object recognition), cognitive flexibility (attentional set-shifting task, ASST), and anxiety-like behaviors. Data suggested that subchronic exposure to nicotine during adolescence produced significant changes in working memory, in two reversal problems in the ASST, and in anxiety-related behaviors. Taken together these data may suggest that limited early exposure to nicotine may produce selective longer term impairments in cognitive and behavioral processes related to working memory and reversal learning.
Keywords: acetylcholine; cognition; executive function; learning; memory; nicotinic.
© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Adriani, W., Macrì, S., Pacifici, R., & Laviola, G. (2002). Peculiar vulnerability to nicotine oral self-administration in mice during early adolescence. Neuropsychopharmacology, 27(2), 212-224.
-
- Adriani, W., Spijker, S., Deroche-Gamonet, V., Laviola, G., Le Moal, M., Smit, A. B., & Piazza, P. V. (2003). Evidence for enhanced neurobehavioral vulnerability to nicotine during periadolescence in rats. Journal of Neuroscience, 23(11), 4712-4716.
-
- Allison, C., & Shoaib, M. (2013). Nicotine improves performance in an attentional set shifting task in rats. Neuropharmacology, 64, 314-320.
-
- Barense, M. D., Fox, M. T., & Baxter, M. G. (2002). Aged rats are impaired on an attentional set-shifting task sensitive to medial frontal cortex damage in young rats. Learning & Memory, 9(4), 191-201. https://doi.org/10.1101/lm.48602
-
- Belluzzi, J. D., Lee, A. G., Oliff, H. S., & Leslie, F. M. (2004). Age-dependent effects of nicotine on locomotor activity and conditioned place preference in rats. Psychopharmacology, 174(3), 389-395.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
