Modulation of Group II Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Signaling by Chronic Cocaine

Abstract
Repeated cocaine produces enduring neuroadaptations in glutamate transmission in the nucleus accumbens that are thought to contribute to addiction. Group II metabotropic glutamate autoreceptors (mGluR2/3) regulate glutamate release, and this study investigates whether repeated cocaine injection produces long-lasting alterations in mGluR2/3 content, phosphorylation, and physiology. Rats were administered cocaine daily for 1 week, and 3 weeks after the last injection, mGluR2/3 protein levels were altered in the accumbens and prefrontal cortex (PFC) but not in the dorsal striatum or ventral tegmental area. The level of mGluR2/3 dimer was elevated in the accumbens and PFC and the monomer was reduced in the PFC only. Furthermore, the relative Ser phosphorylation state of the monomer was elevated in both the accumbens and PFC of cocaine-pretreated subjects, whereas the dimer demonstrated negligible phosphorylation in either treatment group. These changes in mGluR2/3 level and phosphorylation state were associated with reduced mGluR2/3 agonist-induced guanosine 5'-3-O -(thio)triphosphate binding in the accumbens and PFC, but not in the dorsal striatum. Stimulation of mGluR2/3 reduces extracellular glutamate by inhibiting Ca(2+)-dependent and cystine/glutamate antiporter-mediated glutamate release. The capacity of the mGluR2/3 agonist 2R,4R-4-aminopyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (APDC) to inhibit [(35)S]cystine uptake via cystine/glutamate antiporter in accumbens tissue slices was reduced by repeated cocaine. Also, the capacity of APDC to reduce the basal and potassium-stimulated extrasynaptic glutamate was significantly blunted in the accumbens of cocaine-pretreated subjects. Together, these data demonstrate that repeated cocaine produces an enduring reduction in mGluR2/3 function in the nucleus accumbens.