Overstreet David H, Knapp Darin J, Breese George R
Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, 3009 Thurston-Bowles Building, CB#7178, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7178, USA.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2004 Feb;77(2):405-13. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2003.11.010.
Previous work demonstrated that rats subjected to multiple withdrawals from chronic ethanol exhibit a sensitization of anxiety-like behavior compared to animals withdrawn from treatment with an equal but continuous amount of ethanol. This study sought to examine whether corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) could modulate this ethanol-withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior. Initially, rats were administered with CRF (1 microg) or vehicle intraventricularly on two occasions 5 days apart while on control diet (CD) followed by exposure to 7% ethanol diet (ED) for 5 days, with social interaction assessed 5 h into withdrawal. Social interaction was significantly reduced in the CRF-treated animals compared to vehicle-treated rats and vehicle- and CRF-treated rats maintained on CD, indicative that CRF given before ethanol exposure was capable of inducing an adaptive change that sensitized withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior. Next, the CRF(1) receptor antagonist CRA1000 (3 mg/kg, systemically), the CRF(2) receptor antagonist antisauvagine-30 (20 microg intraventricularly), or vehicle was injected 4 h after the ethanol was removed following the first and second cycles of chronic ethanol exposure and the effect on the multiple-withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior determined after the third withdrawal cycle. The CRF(1) receptor antagonist blocked the reduced social interaction behavior, whereas the CRF(2) receptor antagonist was without effect. Similar pretreatment with another CRF(1) receptor antagonist CP-154,526 (10 mg/kg systemically) during the first and second withdrawals also counteracted anxiety-like behavior. These findings indicate that the CRF system and CRF(1) receptors play key roles in the adaptive change responsible for the anxiety-like behavior induced by repeated withdrawals from chronic ethanol.
先前的研究表明,与接受等量但持续给予乙醇处理后戒断的动物相比,经历多次慢性乙醇戒断的大鼠会出现焦虑样行为的敏化。本研究旨在探究促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子(CRF)是否能调节这种乙醇戒断诱导的焦虑样行为。最初,在给予对照饮食(CD)期间,大鼠每隔5天接受两次脑室内注射CRF(1微克)或溶剂,随后给予7%乙醇饮食(ED)5天,并在戒断5小时后评估社交互动情况。与接受溶剂处理的大鼠以及维持CD饮食的接受溶剂和CRF处理的大鼠相比,接受CRF处理的动物的社交互动显著减少,这表明在乙醇暴露前给予CRF能够诱导一种适应性变化,使戒断诱导的焦虑样行为敏感化。接下来,在慢性乙醇暴露的第一个和第二个周期乙醇去除后4小时,注射CRF(1)受体拮抗剂CRA1000(3毫克/千克,全身给药)、CRF(2)受体拮抗剂抗 sauvagine-30(20微克,脑室内给药)或溶剂,并在第三个戒断周期后确定对多次戒断诱导的焦虑样行为的影响。CRF(1)受体拮抗剂阻断了社交互动行为的减少,而CRF(2)受体拮抗剂则没有效果。在第一次和第二次戒断期间用另一种CRF(1)受体拮抗剂CP-154,526(10毫克/千克,全身给药)进行类似的预处理也抵消了焦虑样行为。这些发现表明,CRF系统和CRF(1)受体在由慢性乙醇反复戒断诱导的焦虑样行为的适应性变化中起关键作用。