
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Bitter sensing protects Drosophila from developing experience-dependent cocaine consumption preference
The Journal of Neuroscience
Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is a highly heritable condition for which there are no effective treatments. Testing the many human genetic variants linked to CUD requires a cost-effective, genetically tractable model. This study showed that bitter-sensing neurons prevent cocaine self-administration in Drosophila. Disrupting Drosophila bitter perception enables a model for experience-dependent cocaine preference. The findings underscore the potential of Drosophila as a crucial tool for identifying the genetic mechanisms underlying CUD, aiding in the discovery of new therapeutic targets, and contributing to the development of effective treatments for this highly heritable disease.
Read this issue of the ASAM Weekly
Subscribe to the ASAM Weekly
Visit ASAM
4.9
77 ratings
Bitter sensing protects Drosophila from developing experience-dependent cocaine consumption preference
The Journal of Neuroscience
Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is a highly heritable condition for which there are no effective treatments. Testing the many human genetic variants linked to CUD requires a cost-effective, genetically tractable model. This study showed that bitter-sensing neurons prevent cocaine self-administration in Drosophila. Disrupting Drosophila bitter perception enables a model for experience-dependent cocaine preference. The findings underscore the potential of Drosophila as a crucial tool for identifying the genetic mechanisms underlying CUD, aiding in the discovery of new therapeutic targets, and contributing to the development of effective treatments for this highly heritable disease.
Read this issue of the ASAM Weekly
Subscribe to the ASAM Weekly
Visit ASAM
129 Listeners
706 Listeners
281 Listeners
253 Listeners
3,336 Listeners
31 Listeners
1,321 Listeners
716 Listeners
290 Listeners
562 Listeners
122 Listeners
33 Listeners
175 Listeners
112 Listeners
17 Listeners