Melendez Roberto I, Middaugh Lawrence D, Kalivas Peter W
Department of Neurosciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina 29425, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2006 Dec;30(12):2017-25. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2006.00248.x.
Relapse-like drinking has been studied through the expression of the alcohol deprivation effect (ADE), which is measured by a pronounced increase in ethanol preference and consumption after imposed abstinence. No studies have characterized the ADE in C57BL/6J (B6) mice. The present study examined the effects of length and number of deprivations on the expression of the ADE in B6 mice.
Adult male B6 mice received 24-hour continuous access to ethanol and water for 6 weeks (baseline). Experiment 1 determined the ADE in mice receiving weekly access to 15% ethanol (i.e., exposed 1 day a week and deprived during the other 6 days) for a total of 10 weeks. Experiments 2 and 3 determined the ADE after a single 2-week deprivation period in mice receiving a single concentration of 15% ethanol or multiple concentrations of 7.5, 15, and 30% ethanol, respectively, followed by weekly access to their respective ethanol solutions for 10 weeks. Experiment 4 determined the ADE after a single 2-week deprivation period, followed by daily access to 15% ethanol. Mice never deprived of ethanol (i.e., continuous access) were used as age-matched drinking controls.
The ADE was observed after the initial 6-day deprivation period and was profoundly enhanced (i.e., escalation of the ADE) following weekly reexposure to 15% ethanol. Compared with a single concentration of 15% ethanol, concurrent access to multiple ethanol concentrations resulted in a near 2-fold increase in baseline ethanol consumption. Regardless of having access to single or multiple concentrations of ethanol, the ADE was not observed immediately after a 2-week deprivation period. The ADE was observed (although to a lesser magnitude and duration) following weekly reexposure to single or multiple concentrations of ethanol. Alternatively, following a 2-week deprivation period, mice receiving daily access to 15% ethanol showed a significant decrease in ethanol intake and preference (i.e., negative ADE).
Short-term deprivations followed by repeated intermittent (weekly) reexposure to ethanol produces a robust ADE in B6 mice. Increasing the initial deprivation length to 2 weeks produces various opposing effects, including erasure of an initial ADE, diminished expression and magnitude of the ADE following weekly exposure, and complete reversal of the ADE following daily exposure to ethanol.
通过酒精剥夺效应(ADE)的表达来研究类似复发性饮酒的情况,该效应通过强制戒酒后乙醇偏好和摄入量的显著增加来衡量。尚无研究对C57BL/6J(B6)小鼠的ADE进行特征描述。本研究考察了剥夺的时长和次数对B6小鼠ADE表达的影响。
成年雄性B6小鼠持续24小时可获取乙醇和水,为期6周(基线期)。实验1确定了每周获取15%乙醇(即每周暴露1天,其余6天剥夺)共10周的小鼠的ADE。实验2和3分别确定了在接受单一浓度15%乙醇或多种浓度7.5%、15%和30%乙醇的小鼠经过单一2周剥夺期后,再每周获取各自乙醇溶液10周的ADE。实验4确定了经过单一2周剥夺期后,再每日获取15%乙醇的ADE。从未剥夺乙醇(即持续获取)的小鼠用作年龄匹配的饮酒对照。
在最初6天的剥夺期后观察到了ADE,并且在每周再次暴露于15%乙醇后显著增强(即ADE升级)。与单一浓度15%乙醇相比,同时获取多种乙醇浓度导致基线乙醇摄入量增加近2倍。无论获取单一还是多种浓度的乙醇,在2周剥夺期后并未立即观察到ADE。在每周再次暴露于单一或多种浓度乙醇后观察到了ADE(尽管程度较轻且持续时间较短)。另外,在2周剥夺期后,每日获取15%乙醇的小鼠乙醇摄入量和偏好显著降低(即负性ADE)。
短期剥夺后反复间歇性(每周)再次暴露于乙醇会在B6小鼠中产生强烈的ADE。将初始剥夺时长增加至2周会产生各种相反的效应,包括消除初始ADE、每周暴露后ADE的表达和程度减弱,以及每日暴露于乙醇后ADE完全逆转。