Studies in rats have shown that intermittent footshock stress reinstates dr
ug seeking after prolonged drug-free periods. Recently, we found that anoth
er environmental stressor, acute 1 d food deprivation, potently reinstates
heroin seeking in rats. Here we report that this effect of food deprivation
can be blocked by leptin, a hormone involved in the regulation of energy b
alance and food intake. Rats were trained to self-administer heroin (0.05-0
.1 mg/kg, i.v., per infusion, three 3 hr sessions per day) for 8-10 d. The
heroin-reinforced behavior was then extinguished for 10-13 d, during which
lever presses had no reinforced consequences. Subsequently, rats were teste
d for reinstatement after 1 d of food deprivation (experiment 1) or exposur
e to intermittent footshock (15 min, 0.6 mA) and heroin priming injections
(0.25 mg/kg, s.c.) (experiment 2). Acute food deprivation reinstated heroin
seeking, an effect that was attenuated by leptin (2 or 4 mug/rat, i.c.v.;
two infusions, given 21 hr and 20-30 min before the start of the test sessi
ons). In contrast, leptin had no effect on reinstatement of heroin seeking
induced by intermittent footshock or priming injections of heroin. These da
ta indicate that food deprivation can provoke relapse to heroin seeking via
a leptin-dependent mechanism, which is not involved in relapse induced by
footshock stress or reexposure to heroin.