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Relaxin-3 receptor (Rxfp3) gene deletion reduces operant sucrose- but not alcohol-responding in mice

journal contribution
posted on 2015-11-01, 00:00 authored by A W Walker, Craig SmithCraig Smith, A L Gundlach, A J Lawrence
The pervasive use of refined sugars in highly accessible, palatable foods and persistent exposure to reinforcing food-associated cues has contributed to overconsumption of sugar-rich diets and the current obesity epidemic in Western society. We have shown previously that brain relaxin-3 mRNA levels positively correlate with sucrose and alcohol intake, and that central antagonism of relaxin-3 receptors (RXFP3) attenuates alcohol self-administration and alcohol-seeking in rats, but food-seeking behaviour and palatable food consumption in mice. To further examine the relationship between motivated appetitive behaviours and relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling, we investigated the effect of Rxfp3 gene deletion in C57BL/6J mice on sucrose and alcohol self-administration and cue-induced reinstatement (RNST) of sucrose- and alcohol-seeking. Acquisition and maintenance of sucrose and alcohol self-administration was assessed in male wild-type (WT) and Rxfp3 knockout (KO) (C57BL/6J(RXFP3TM1) (/) (DGen) ) littermate mice using fixed ratio (FR) schedules of reinforcement. Mice were subsequently challenged with a progressive ratio (PR) test to measure motivation and, following extinction training, re-exposed to reward-associated cues to evaluate RNST of active lever-responding. Wild-type and Rxfp3 KO mice displayed similar acquisition of FR1 sucrose self-administration, but Rxfp3 KO mice responded less when the instrumental requirement was increased to FR3. These mice also showed a lower breakpoint for sucrose and attenuated cue-induced RNST of sucrose-seeking. Notably, no marked genotype differences in alcohol-responding were observed. In mice, endogenous relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling promotes self-administration of sucrose under high response requirements and cue-induced RNST of sucrose-seeking, but does not apparently regulate motivation to consume alcohol or alcohol-seeking behaviour.

History

Journal

Genes, brain and behavior

Volume

14

Issue

8

Pagination

625 - 634

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing

Location

Hoboken, N.J.

ISSN

1601-1848

eISSN

1601-183X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, John Wiley & Sons and International Behavioural and Neural Genetics Society