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Behavioral changes induced by cocaine in mice are modified by a hyperlipidic diet or recombinant leptin

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to determine if the acute behavioral effects of cocaine acutely administered intraperitoneally (ip) at doses of 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg on white male CF1 mice, 90 days of age, would be influenced by leptin acutely administered ip (at doses of 5, 10 and 20 µg/kg) or by endogenous leptin production enhanced by a high-fat diet. The acute behavioral effects of cocaine were evaluated in open-field, elevated plus-maze and forced swimming tests. Results were compared between a group of 80 mice consuming a balanced diet and a high-fat diet, and a group of 80 mice fed a commercially available rodent chow formula (Ralston Purina) but receiving recombinant leptin (rLeptin) or saline ip. Both the high-fat-fed and rLeptin-treated mice showed decreased locomotion in the open-field test, spent more time in the open arms of the elevated plus-maze and showed less immobility time in the forced swimming test (F(1,68) = 7.834, P = 0.007). There was an interaction between diets and cocaine/saline treatments in locomotion (F(3,34) = 3.751, P = 0.020) and exploration (F(3,34) = 3.581, P = 0.024). These results suggest that anxiolytic effects and increased general activity were induced by leptin in cocaine-treated mice and that low leptin levels are associated with behavioral depression. Chronic changes in diet composition producing high leptin levels or rLeptin treatment may result in an altered response to cocaine in ethologic tests that measure degrees of anxiety and depression, which could be attributed to an antagonistic effect of leptin.

Mice; Cocaine; Leptin; Hyperlipidic diet; Interaction


Braz J Med Biol Res, December 2006, Volume 39(12) 1625-1635

Behavioral changes induced by cocaine in mice are modified by a hyperlipidic diet or recombinant leptin

Correspondence and Footnotes E. Erhardt, L.C.E. Zibetti, J.M. Godinho, B. Bacchieri and H.M.T. Barros

Departamento de Farmacologia, Fundação Faculdade Federal de Ciências Médicas de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil

References

Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to determine if the acute behavioral effects of cocaine acutely administered intraperitoneally (ip) at doses of 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg on white male CF1 mice, 90 days of age, would be influenced by leptin acutely administered ip (at doses of 5, 10 and 20 µg/kg) or by endogenous leptin production enhanced by a high-fat diet. The acute behavioral effects of cocaine were evaluated in open-field, elevated plus-maze and forced swimming tests. Results were compared between a group of 80 mice consuming a balanced diet and a high-fat diet, and a group of 80 mice fed a commercially available rodent chow formula (Ralston Purina) but receiving recombinant leptin (rLeptin) or saline ip. Both the high-fat-fed and rLeptin-treated mice showed decreased locomotion in the open-field test, spent more time in the open arms of the elevated plus-maze and showed less immobility time in the forced swimming test (F(1,68) = 7.834, P = 0.007). There was an interaction between diets and cocaine/saline treatments in locomotion (F(3,34) = 3.751, P = 0.020) and exploration (F(3,34) = 3.581, P = 0.024). These results suggest that anxiolytic effects and increased general activity were induced by leptin in cocaine-treated mice and that low leptin levels are associated with behavioral depression. Chronic changes in diet composition producing high leptin levels or rLeptin treatment may result in an altered response to cocaine in ethologic tests that measure degrees of anxiety and depression, which could be attributed to an antagonistic effect of leptin.

Key words: Mice, Cocaine, Leptin, Hyperlipidic diet, Interaction

Introduction

It is currently recognized that appetite expression, body adiposity control, beginning of puberty, behavioral and affective changes, among other functions, are chemically coded in the hypothalamus. The derangement of neurochemical signaling in the hypothalamus by environmental, genetic and hormonal factors may produce hyperphagia, anorexia and anomalies of sexual development and gonadal function (1).

Leptin, our study target, is a recently discovered hormone which was initially considered to be a feeding regulator (2,3). Leptin is produced in many organs and secreted mainly by adipose tissue. It plays an important role in the control of food ingestion, in the reproductive system and in several steps involved in metabolism, such as insulin secretion, lipolysis and glucose transport. However, one of its most important physiological roles is to signal the nutritional status during periods of food deprivation (4-9).

Leptin levels vary widely among individuals with similar body compositions and in depressed and anorectic patients, suggesting that factors other than body adiposity modulate leptin secretion (10). In fact, the fat content of a meal and habitual dietary fat content, but not carbohydrate or protein intake, are important factors that can modify leptin secretion (11-13).

It has been observed that body mass index (BMI, the quotient of weight (kg) divided by the square of the height (m2)) can be correlated with serum leptin levels linearly in both men and women (10). Leptin levels in men with a BMI >30 kg/m2 were 170% higher than in men with a BMI <27 kg/m2 (13). This relation was not seen in depressed patients, suggesting a disturbed regulation of leptin secretion in mood disorders (10). In fact, these patients present more intense leptin secretion during the night when compared to normal subjects, despite a reported weight loss by the majority of patients (10). A sexual dimorphism was seen between depressed and normal patients, with higher leptin levels in females (10).

There are other factors that suggest a role of leptin in mood disorders. Leptin stimulates the sympathetic nervous system whereas both galanin and neuropeptide Y (NPY) reduce sympathetic tone (14). NPY has anxiolytic activity, and leptin, which antagonizes the action of NPY, may have anxiogenic effects (15). In addition, leptin administration inhibits diencephalic nitric oxide synthase, thus increasing serotonin metabolism in mice (16). Since serotonin has a role in depressive diseases, it is possible that leptin may play a role in mood regulation (13,17). However, an interesting study by Suomalainen and Mannisto (18) showed no anxiolytic/anxiogenic or depressive-like effects resulting from acute ip administration of leptin to mice. Interestingly, a recent study by Asakawa and colleagues (19) showed that in ob/ob mice repeated injections of leptin ameliorated anxiety levels in the elevated plus-maze test, suggesting an important relationship between obesity syndrome, leptin and behavior.

The elevated consumption of foods rich in calories such as high-fat food, associated with low physical activity, have led to an increase in obesity in the developing world, particularly among children and adolescents (20,21). In Brazil, about 20% of Brazilian teenagers are obese (22). In addition, cocaine addiction represents another important problem in modern society and the consumption of this drug has been increasing among teenagers (23). It has been extensively reported that cocaine alters the reward system, thus impairing the effects of natural rewards, such as eating, drinking, sex, and social interactions (24). On this basis, it is important to determine a possible interaction between high-fat foods as enhancers of leptin production and behavioral changes induced by cocaine. Thus, the objective of the present study was to determine whether the acute behavioral effects of cocaine are influenced by exogenous treatment with leptin or by enhanced endogenous production of leptin through a high-fat diet.

Material and Methods

Animals

Ninety-day-old white male CF1 mice weighing 28-47 g were purchased from Instituto de Pesquisas Biomédicas, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. The animals were housed in individual cages (30 x 20 x 12 cm) under controlled room temperature (20-22ºC) on a light-dark cycle (lights on from 7:00 am to 19:00 pm), with free access to water and food. Maintenance and experimental procedures were submitted to and approved by the Animal Experimentation Committee of FFFCMPA, Faculty of Medicine and were in agreement with the guidelines of the Society of Neuroscience and of the Brazilian College for Animal Experimentation.

Experiment 1: high-fat diet

Animals were randomly divided into two groups of 40 animals each. One group was fed a balanced diet (20% of total kcal as lactalbumin, 30% of total kcal as purified soy oil and 50% of total kcal as corn starch) and the other a high-fat diet (20% of total kcal as lactalbumin, 30% of total kcal as corn starch and 50% of total kcal as purified soy oil) for 48 consecutive days. During this period, the animals were weighed three times a week. The high-fat diet and the balanced diet (Table 1) were prepared according to the standards of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (diet macronutrients were weighed and mixed homogeneously, with enough distilled water added to form a soft dough that could be spread on trays, cut into squares (2 x 2 cm) and dried under constant ventilation at 22ºC for 12 h). The diet squares were then covered and stored separately according to their composition in a refrigerator (4ºC) in hermetically sealed plastic boxes containing a silica gel pack to reduce humidity and thus to avoid fungus proliferation,for use within 7 days.

According to the method reported by Lin et al. (25), mice were tested at the age of 3 weeks, a phase when the animals had an increase in leptin production, but still retained central leptin sensitivity.

In each subgroup (N = 10), the animals were injected ip with saline or cocaine in saline (5, 10, and 20 mg/kg). Cocaine hydrochloride (Merck & Co., Darmstadt, Germany) and saline solutions were prepared in deionized water immediately before use and administered acutely at a fixed dose of 1 mL/100 g animal weight. Drugs were administered 60 min before the open-field test, 30 min before the plus-maze test, and 24, 5, and 1 h before the forced swim test.

Behavioral tests were applied once a day starting on the 46th day of the special diet, in the following order: open-field, elevated plus-maze and forced swimming test. The cages were carried to test rooms, illuminated with a red fluorescent light on the ceiling, and each test was recorded on a video recording system for further analysis.

Table 1.
Composition of the balanced and high-fat diets in macronutrients offered to the animals (diet contained minerals and vitamins).

Experiment 2: recombinant leptin treatment

Mice were divided into 4 groups of 20 animals, respectively receiving saline (controls), 5 mg/kg cocaine, 10 mg/kg cocaine, and 20 mg/kg cocaine. Each one of the 4 groups was subdivided into 4 subgroups of 5 mice each that received saline solution (controls), 5 µg/kg body weight human recombinant leptin (rLeptin), 10 µg/kg body weight human rLeptin, and 20 µg/kg body weight human rLeptin, respectively. Drugs were administered according to the same schedule as in Experiment 1. After an adaptation time of 1 week in our laboratory, mice were submitted to the behavioral tests in the same daily sequence as described in Experiment 1, i.e., open-field, elevated plus-maze and forced swimming tests.

Leptin doses were chosen on the basis of the data of Ahren et al. (26).

Behavioral procedures

All tests were performed in a quiet and dark room lighted by a red ceiling fluorescent lamp and behaviors were recorded on a video recording system for later analysis.

Open-field test

The animal is placed inside a lighted arena from which it cannot escape, and patterns of ambulation and behaviors such as rearing, grooming, and defecation are observed for brief periods of time. The open-field used was a circular arena 90 cm in diameter, with a center circle (40 cm in diameter) with 45-cm high acrylic walls covered with white paper. The mouse was placed in the center of the arena and allowed to explore for 5 min (27).

Elevated plus-maze

The elevated plus-maze consisted of a black acrylic cross of two closed arms (30 x 5 x 15 cm) and two open arms (30 x 5 cm) raised 50 cm above the floor. For each test, the mouse was placed in the center of the cross facing an open arm and was allowed to explore the maze for 5 min. In this test, anxiolytic compounds selectively increase the percent time spent and/or entries into the open arms and, in contrast, anxiogenic compounds selectively decrease the percent time spent and/or entries into the open arms (28).

Forced swim test

Mice were placed in a 10-L glass container with 6 cm of water depth, containing water at 25 ± 1ºC, for 6 min. Behavior was recorded for analysis during the last 4 min of the test. It was noted that, if mice are forced to swim in an inevitable situation, first they present a vigorous attitude, as if looking for an exit, and later they remain immobile, performing only the movements necessary to keep their heads out of water.

Statistical analysis

Two-way ANOVA was used to analyze all the behavioral parameters of each experiment. When significant differences were found, subgroup analysis was performed with the Student-Newman-Keuls test using the statistical package Sigma Stat for Windows, version 2.0 (Jandell Scientific Corporation, San Rafael, CA, USA). The level of significance was set at P < 0.05.

Results

No difference in body weight gain was observed between mice that received a balanced diet and mice that received a high-fat diet. The initial mean (± SD) weight of mice entering the balanced diet group was 37.9 ± 25.2 g, and the initial mean weight of mice assigned to the high-fat diet was 37.3 ± 3.3 g; after 46 days of diet their weights were 43.7 ± 4.9 g (an increase of 15.3% over their initial weight) and 44.8 ± 4.2 g (an increase of 20.10% over their initial weight), respectively.

Open-field test

In Experiment 1 there was interaction between diets and cocaine/saline treatments regarding locomotion (F(3,34) = 3.751, P = 0.020) and exploration (F(3,34) = 3.581, P = 0.024). High-fat-fed mice were less susceptible to the stimulant effects of cocaine when compared to mice that received a balanced diet. The latter presented an increase in locomotion and exploration when compared to the former. In Experiment 2 there was no interaction between leptin and cocaine. Administration of leptin did not alter the locomotor stimulant effects of cocaine. Cocaine (F(3,64) = 12.321, P £ 0.001)influenced grooming in the second experiment (Table 2).

Regarding grooming behavior, in Experiment 1, the group of mice that received a high-fat diet showed lower intensity compared to the group of mice maintained on a balanced diet (Table 2). However, in Experiment 2, administration of leptin did not change the increase in grooming that followed cocaine administration (Table 3). Interestingly, mice treated with 10 µg/kg rLeptin and 5 mg/kg cocaine showed much higher locomotion activity in the center of the open-field, as shown in Table 3, indicating that this specific dose combination of the hormone and cocaine might have an anxiolytic effect (F(9,64) = 2,249, P = 0.030).

Plus-maze test

In the experiment with the plus-maze test, cocaine induced a statistically significant decrease in total number of closed arm visits (F(3,67) = 5.760, P = 0.001) and total time spent in closed arms (F(3,67) = 3.500, P = 0.020) and also increased total time spent in the open arms (F(3,67) = 4.757, P = 0.005) as seen in Table 2.

An interaction between cocaine and leptin treatments was observed (F(9,64) = 2.129, P = 0.040) as shown in Table 4. Cocaine also interfered with total time spent in the closed arms (F(3,63) = 4.925, P = 0.004) and total time spent in the open arms (F(3,63) = 5.190, P = 0.003) in Experiment 2. In Experiment 2, cocaine induced the same overall effects, also decreasing total number of closed arm visits (F(3,63) = 3.487, P = 0.021). The percent time spent in the open arms increased with the increase in leptin dose (Table 5), and percent entries into the open arms reached peak values at 20 µg/kg rLeptin with cocaine.

Interaction between cocaine and the hormonal condition was observed for some behaviors. High-fat-fed mice showed higher stretching frequencies, except for 20 mg/kg cocaine, while in Experiment 2, mice receiving 20 µg/kg leptin showed increasing stretching frequencies as cocaine doses increased to 20 mg/kg.

Forced swimming test

In Experiment 1, the group of animals that received a high-fat diet spent less time in immobility (F(1,68) = 7.834, P = 0.007; Table 6) and more time swimming (F(1,68) = 6.524, P = 0.013; Table 6), and also presented an increment in the frequency of swimming (F(1, 68) = 6.870, P = 0.011; Table 6) when compared to the group of animals maintained on a balanced diet. In Experiment 2, mice receiving 20 mg/kg cocaine spent less time in immobility and more time in climbing as leptin doses increased (Table 7). Mice that received a high-fat diet showed higher swimming frequencies (F(1,68) = 6.870, P = 0.011) than mice fed a balanced diet (Table 6). In the second experiment, mice receiving 20 µg/kg leptin and mice receiving no leptin dose showed closely similar swimming frequencies until the administration of 10 mg/kg cocaine, when mice receiving no leptin showed increased values and mice receiving the highest leptin dose showed decreased values when exposed to the same dose of cocaine.

Table 2.
Ethologic evaluation of anxiety signs in mice fed a balanced or high-fat diet and exposed to cocaine. Open-field test (experiment 1).

Table 3.
Ethologic evaluation of anxiety signs in mice exposed to different cocaine and recombinant leptin (rLeptin) doses. Open-field test. (experiment 2).

Table 4.
Evaluation of the anxiolytic effects of a balanced or high-fat diet in mice exposed to cocaine. Plus-maze test (experiment 1).

Table 5.
Evaluation of the anxiolytic effects of different recombinant leptin (rLeptin) doses in mice exposed to cocaine. Plus-maze test (experiment 2).

Table 6.
Behavioral evaluation of the antidepressant activities of a balanced or high-fat diet in mice exposed to cocaine. Forced swimming test (experiment 1).

Table 7.
Behavioral evaluation of the antidepressant activities of different doses of recombinant leptin (rLeptin) in mice exposed to cocaine. Forced swimming test (experiment 2).

Discussion

In rodents, high-fat intake may be associated with increased serum leptin and obesity, and these leptin levels are related to the amount of body lipid (13,29). It was our objective to compare data for high-fat-fed mice with those for mice receiving a dose of rLeptin, in behavioral tests in order to detect changes in animal behavior due to leptin.

In contrast to other methods used to study anxious behavior in rodents, such as the elevated plus-maze, the open-field test allows a comprehensive description of the animal's behavior, since more behaviors can be readily observed and quantified (30,31). Locomotion, a behavioral that can be interpreted as an adaptation to a stressful situation, was affected by an interaction between high-fat or balanced diets and cocaine or saline treatments in the first experiment. In Experiment 1, high-fat-fed mice showed a lower value of increased locomotion when receiving 20 mg/kg cocaine. In Experiment 2, mice that had received cocaine also showed significant hyperactivity and leptin decreased this effect. Therefore, the results demonstrate that mice treated with cocaine display higher locomotion and that a high-fat diet or leptin treatment decrease this behavioral effect (32). This could be interpreted as an antagonism of leptin against the effects of cocaine. It might be suggested that the effect of leptin is an adaptation to stressful situations.

Grooming behavior might also be considered to be an index of behavioral adaptation to a stressful situation. Increased grooming behavior has been related to fear or an increased emotional response, and has been associated with conflict or frustration in different species. As a manifestation of emotionality, grooming can be decreased when a very intense excitation is presented, being replaced by freezing (33) and therefore this reduction could be the result of excitation (that promotes an increase in locomotor activity) or of an intense anxiety/fear (that promotes freezing behaviors). Cocaine treatment induces an increase in grooming, but this effect was dependent on the diet. The mice fed a high-fat diet displayed lower frequencies of grooming compared to mice fed a balanced diet. Mice that received any dose of cocaine but no leptin showed higher grooming values, but after they receive 10 µg/kg leptin these values fell, pointing to an antagonistic action of leptin in decreasing this variable. Leptin treatment also decreased grooming behaviors after cocaine treatment. All of these results point to a possible anxiolytic effect of leptin in the open-field test.

In the elevated plus-maze test, anxiolytic compounds selectively increased the percent of time spent and/or entries into the open arms and, in contrast, anxiogenic compounds selectively decreased percent time spent and/or percentage of entries into the open arms (28,34). As pointed out by Rogerio and Takahashi (35) in their experiment about the anxiogenic action of cocaine in mice, the ability of cocaine to induce anxiogenic effects in mice may depend, at least in part, on the animals' emotional state. They proposed that repeated handling made animals less anxious and more susceptible to the anxiogenic effects of cocaine. They concluded that a single cocaine injection induces anxiogenic-like effects in handling-habituated mice, while repeated injections of the drug did not alter the indices of anxiety as measured in the elevated plus-maze. This could be the case for our mice on special diets that were handled every two or three days. However, our animals showed the opposite effect with cocaine - an "anxiolytic" effect in mice on a high-fat diet or receiving leptin spent more time in the open arms. Also important to note is that the anxiolytic effect of leptin became more evident in those animals exposed to the highest dose of cocaine, i.e., lower values in mice treated only with leptin, and the percent time spent in the open arms increasing progressively with increasing leptin doses. This effect has been rarely reported by other laboratories, but has been seen with Wistar rats in our laboratory (Loebens M and Barros HMT, unpublished data) on other occasions. The explanation for this effect still needs to be determined. We believe that cocaine decreases risk evaluation by the animals and induces open-arm entries in spite of the risk involved, due to the impulsivity-induced effect. Leptin per se does not increase the percentage of entries into the open arms, but when mice received increasing doses of cocaine, this behavior became more evident, reaching peak values at 20 µg/kg leptin.

High-fat-fed animals showed less immobility, spent more time swimming and climbing, and presented higher values of swimming frequency compared to mice fed a balanced diet. These results are consistent with the findings of Collin et al. (36) who observed that ob/ob mice (leptin-deficient) exhibited significantly lower locomotor activity and increased immobility compared to their lean littermates. In addition, a clinical study performed by Kraus and colleagues (37) showed low levels of leptin in depressed patients. In contrast, we found no difference in immobility between mice treated or not with leptin.

Frederich and co-workers (29) demonstrated that a high-fat diet evokes a sustained increase in circulating leptin in both normal and transgenic mice, and high levels of leptin have been shown to increase energy expenditure. However, it is important to point out that, when animals on each diet type were divided into two groups - above or below the mean weight gain of control animals - no differences in behavior were detected between these groups.

Leptin exerts its action through several other hormones in a cascade of reactions involving, for example, cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcripts (CART). These CART peptides are neurotransmitters that have received much attention as mediators of feeding behavior and body weight regulation in mammals, and animal studies have demonstrated that CART expression is regulated by both leptin and glucocorticoids (38). CART have also been implicated in the behavioral and neuroendocrine effects of leptin (39).

On the other hand, CART peptides have a role in drug abuse. They are found in key brain regions associated with reward/reinforcement such as the ventral tegmental area (VTA), ventral pallidum, amygdala, lateral hypothalamus, and nucleus accumbens. CART mRNA levels were changed in the VTA of cocaine overdose victims, showing that cocaine affects CART in animals and also in humans and supporting a role for CART-cocaine interactions in humans. It is important to note that injection of CART peptides into the VTA caused a small increase in locomotor activity and promoted conditioned place preference, suggesting that CART has psychostimulant-like effects. However, co-treatment of the animals with both intra-VTA CART and systemic cocaine produced only partially additive effects, and this additivity seemed to occur at lower concentrations of the drugs. At higher doses, CART tended to oppose the locomotor activity induced by systemic cocaine, acting as a functional "partial agonist" in the VTA (40). This could explain why, in the present study, rats fed a high-fat diet or treated with rLeptin showed less hyperactivity in locomotion and exploration in the open-field test when they received 20 mg/kg cocaine. Also, we observed an increased anxiolytic effect as shown by an increase in percent time spent in the open arms in the elevated plus-maze test with increasing doses of cocaine and leptin. Mice that had received cocaine and no leptin showed higher locomotion values. Thus, we may conclude that leptin can change the effects of cocaine in mice by increasing CART expression, as reported in other studies.

We have demonstrated that animals exposed to high leptin levels evoked by a high-fat diet or to rLeptin treatment can change the behavioral effects induced by cocaine in ethologic tests that measure degrees of anxiety and depression. Further studies are necessary to validate these findings and establish a link between cocaine effects and nutritional status in humans.

Acknowledgments

We wish to thank FFFCMPA's staff for their collaboration during the development of this work. We would also like to thank the excellent technical assistance in veterinary nutrition from Hoffmann, La Roche Labs., Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. Human rLeptin was gently provided by Dr. Mark Heinmann from Lilly Research Labs., Indianapolis, IN, USA.

Address for correspondence: E. Erhardt, Departamento de Farmacologia, Fundação Faculdade Federal de Ciências Médicas de Porto Alegre, Av. Neuza G. Brizola, 495, Apto. 301, 90460-230 Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil. E-mail: eerhardt@terra.com.br

Research supported by FFFCMPA and Medley Laboratories. Received May 18, 2005. Accepted August 21, 2006.

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  • Correspondence and Footnotes

  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      12 Feb 2008
    • Date of issue
      Dec 2006

    History

    • Received
      18 May 2005
    • Accepted
      21 Aug 2006
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