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Thaísa Barros-Santos

Department of Biological Sciences, Universidade Estadual De Santa Cruz, Ilhéus, Brazil.

4 papers in the library · 109 citations · publishing 2018-2022

Papers

Ayahuasca and Its DMT- and β-carbolines – Containing Ingredients Block the Expression of Ethanol-Induced Conditioned Place Preference in Mice: Role of the Treatment Environment

Frontiers in Pharmacology May 29, 2018 Elisangela Gouveia Cata-Preta, Yasmim A. Serra, Eliseu Da Cruz Moreira-Junior et al. 50 citations

Ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic beverage containing DMT and β-carbolines, can reduce ethanol reward in male mice without itself being rewarding at certain doses. An intermediate dose of ayahuasca induced conditioned place preference (CPP), while higher doses and its plant components Banisteriopsis caapi (Bc) and Psychotria viridis (Pv) did not. Pretreatment with ayahuasca blocked the development of ethanol-induced CPP, whereas Bc and Pv alone had no effect. Post-conditioning treatment with ayahuasca, Bc, or Pv in the ethanol-paired environment blocked expression of ethanol-induced CPP; treatment in the saline-paired compartment also blocked expression for intermediate ayahuasca and Bc doses, and for Pv. The environment influences these therapeutic effects.

Role of 5-HT2A receptors in the effects of ayahuasca on ethanol self-administration using a two-bottle choice paradigm in male mice

Psychopharmacology March 7, 2022 Yasmim A. Serra, Thaísa Barros-Santos, Alexia Anjos-Santos et al. 28 citations

In mice undergoing alcohol abstinence, treatment with ayahuasca blocked the return of alcohol self-administration. The effects depended on activation of the 5-HT2A receptor. The findings suggest that ayahuasca and other 5-HT2A receptor agonists could serve as adjunctive pharmacotherapies for alcohol use disorder.

Ayahuasca blocks the reinstatement of methylphenidate-induced conditioned place preference in mice: behavioral and brain Fos expression evaluations

Psychopharmacology July 16, 2020 Henrique Sousa Reis, Isa R. S. Rodrigues, Alexia Anjos-Santos et al. 21 citations

Ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic beverage used in traditional Amazonian rituals, blocked the reinstatement of methylphenidate-induced conditioned place preference in mice, indicating reduced drug-seeking behavior. Both ayahuasca (100 mg/kg, orally) and methylphenidate (10 mg/kg, i.p.) separately induced conditioned place preference. However, methylphenidate altered Fos expression in several limbic brain regions associated with drug abuse, while ayahuasca had limited effects on Fos expression. Treatment with ayahuasca after conditioning with methylphenidate prevented reinstatement of the conditioned place preference and generally blocked the changes in Fos expression induced by methylphenidate conditioning or reexposure. These findings suggest ayahuasca restored normal brain function in areas linked to long-term drug wanting or seeking.

Ibogaine Blocks Cue- and Drug-Induced Reinstatement of Conditioned Place Preference to Ethanol in Male Mice.

Frontiers in pharmacology January 1, 2021 Gabrielle M Henriques, Alexia Anjos-Santos, Isa R S Rodrigues et al. 10 citations

Ibogaine, a psychedelic from the African plant Tabernanthe iboga, blocked the reinstatement of a conditioned place preference for ethanol in male mice, suggesting it may disrupt learned alcohol-seeking behaviors. Ethanol (1.8 g/kg) induced a conditioned place preference, but ibogaine (10 or 30 mg/kg) did not produce rewarding effects on its own. Repeated ibogaine treatment after ethanol conditioning prevented reinstatement of the preference both when mice received a priming ethanol injection and when they were re-exposed to the ethanol-paired compartment without the drug. These results indicate ibogaine could have therapeutic potential for alcohol use disorder at doses that lack rewarding effects.