Gut microbiome depletion modulates cocaine-induced behavioral and transcriptional responses in female mice.
Cocaine use disorder is a chronic relapsing condition with no FDA-approved biological treatments. The gut microbiome has emerged as a key modulator of neurobehavioral responses to drugs of abuse, yet its role in female animals has been under studied. Here, we investigated the effects of gut microbiome depletion on cocaine-induced behavioral and transcriptional responses in female mice. Adult female C57BL/6 J mice were treated with a non-absorbable oral antibiotic (Abx) cocktail for two weeks to deplete the gut microbiome, followed by behavioral assays assessing locomotor sensitization and conditioned place preference (CPP) to cocaine. Abx-treated females displayed reduced locomotor sensitization and a shifted CPP dose-response curve, characterized by attenuated preference at higher cocaine doses. Transcriptional analysis of the nucleus accumbens (NAc) revealed that microbiome depletion suppressed cocaine-induced expression of immediate early genes (c-Fos, FosB, Nr4a1, Egr4) and altered dopamine-related (Drd1) and microglial (Cx3cr1) markers. These findings contrast with prior studies in males, where microbiome depletion enhanced cocaine-induced behavioral plasticity. The observed effects suggest distinct gut-brain signaling as an important contributor to cocaine reinforcement and neuroadaptations in females. This study provides novel insights into microbiome regulation of addiction-relevant behaviors and highlights the necessity of sex-specific investigations in neuropsychiatric disorders. Further research is needed to elucidate the molecular pathways linking gut dysbiosis to substance use vulnerability in females.