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1. Methylphenidate with or without fluoxetine triggers reinstatement of cocaine seeking behavior in rats.

2. Adolescent-onset of cocaine use is associated with heightened stress-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking.

3. Kalirin-7 mediates cocaine-induced AMPA receptor and spine plasticity, enabling incentive sensitization.

4. Adolescents are more vulnerable to cocaine addiction: behavioral and electrophysiological evidence.

5. Group I mGluR activation reverses cocaine-induced accumulation of calcium-permeable AMPA receptors in nucleus accumbens synapses via a protein kinase C-dependent mechanism.

6. Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors are present in nucleus accumbens synapses after prolonged withdrawal from cocaine self-administration but not experimenter-administered cocaine.

7. Dopamine receptor expression and distribution dynamically change in the rat nucleus accumbens after withdrawal from cocaine self-administration.

8. Persistent increases in cocaine-seeking behavior after acute exposure to cold swim stress.

9. Fos after single and repeated self-administration of cocaine and saline in the rat: emphasis on the Basal forebrain and recalibration of expression.

10. Individual differences in dopamine cell neuroadaptations following cocaine self-administration.

11. Stress and addiction: glucocorticoid receptor in dopaminoceptive neurons facilitates cocaine seeking.

12. Prominent activation of brainstem and pallidal afferents of the ventral tegmental area by cocaine.

13. Formation of accumbens GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors mediates incubation of cocaine craving.

14. The role of corticosterone in food deprivation-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking in the rat.

15. Amphetamine and cocaine do not increase Narp expression in rat ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens or prefrontal cortex, but Narp may contribute to individual differences in responding to a novel environment.

16. Enhanced reactivity and vulnerability to cocaine following methylphenidate treatment in adolescent rats.

17. Enhanced vulnerability to cocaine self-administration is associated with elevated impulse activity of midbrain dopamine neurons.

18. Glucocorticoids and behavioral effects of psychostimulants. II: cocaine intravenous self-administration and reinstatement depend on glucocorticoid levels.

19. Glucocorticoids and behavioral effects of psychostimulants. I: locomotor response to cocaine depends on basal levels of glucocorticoids.

20. Acute blockade of corticosterone secretion decreases the psychomotor stimulant effects of cocaine.

21. Acute pharmacological blockade of corticosterone secretion reverses food restriction-induced sensitization of the locomotor response to cocaine.

22. Stress-induced sensitization and glucocorticoids. II. Sensitization of the increase in extracellular dopamine induced by cocaine depends on stress-induced corticosterone secretion.

23. Inhibition of corticosterone synthesis by Metyrapone decreases cocaine-induced locomotion and relapse of cocaine self-administration.

24. Corticosterone circadian secretion differentially facilitates dopamine-mediated psychomotor effect of cocaine and morphine.

25. Amphetamine and cocaine do not increase Narp expression in rat ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens or prefrontal cortex, but Narp may contribute to individual differences in responding to a novel environment

26. Influence of glucocorticoids on dopaminergic transmission in the rat dorsolateral striatum

27. The dopaminergic hyper-responsiveness of the shell of the nucleus accumbens is hormone-dependent

28. Functional heterogeneity in dopamine release and in the expression of Fos-like proteins within the rat striatal complex

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