Edward Hagen, Roger Sullivan, Robert Schmidt, Genela Morris, Richard Kempter, and Peter Hammerstein (accepted)
Ecology and neurobiology of toxin avoidance and the paradox of drug reward
Neuroscience.
Current neurobiological theory of drug use is based on the observation
that all addictive drugs induce changes in activity of dopaminergic
circuitry, interfering with reward processing, and thus enhancing drug seeking
and consumption behaviors. Current theory of drug origins, in contrast,
views almost all major drugs of abuse, including nicotine, cocaine and opiates,
as plant neurotoxins that evolved to punish and deter herbivores. According
to this latter view, plants should not have evolved compounds that reward
or reinforce plant consumption. Mammals, in turn, should not have evolved
reinforcement mechanisms easily triggered by toxic substances. Situated in
an ecological context, therefore, drug reward is a paradox. In an attempt
to resolve the paradox, we review the neurobiology of aversive learning and
toxin avoidance and their relationships to appetitive learning. We seek to
answer the question: Why doesn't aversive learning prevent the repeated use
of plant drugs? We conclude by proposing alternative models of drug seeking
and use. Specifically, we suggest that humans, like other animals, might have
evolved to counter-exploit plant neurotoxins.