Abstract
Ventral hippocampus (vHPC) CA1 pyramidal neurons send glutamatergic projections to nucleus accumbens (NAc), and this vHPC-NAc circuit mediates cocaine seeking and reward, but it is unclear whether vHPC-NAc neuron properties are modulated by cocaine exposure to drive subsequent behavior. The immediate early gene transcription factor ΔFosB is induced throughout the brain by cocaine and is critical for cocaine seeking, but it’s function in vHPC-NAc neurons is not understood. We now show that circuit-specific knockout of ΔFosB in vHPC-NAc neurons impaired cocaine reward expression and forced abstinence-induced seeking. We also found that vHPC-NAc excitability was decreased by experimenter-administered repeated cocaine and cocaine self-administration, and this cocaine-induced excitability decrease was mediated by ΔFosB expression. To uncover the mechanism of this change in circuit function, we used circuit-specific translating ribosome affinity purification (TRAP) to assess cocaine-induced, ΔFosB-dependent changes in gene expression in vHPC-NAc. We found that cocaine causes a ΔFosB-dependent increase in the expression of calreticulin, an ER-resident calcium-buffering protein. Calreticulin expression mediated vHPC-NAc excitability and was necessary for cocaine reward. These findings uncover a novel, non-canonical mechanism by which cocaine increases calreticulin in vHPC leading to decreased vHPC-NAc excitability and drives cocaine seeking and reward.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.