Blum Kenneth, Oscar-Berman Marlene, Badgaiyan Rajendra, Braverman Eric R, Gold Mark S
Department of Psychiatry & McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, College of Medicine , Gainesville, Florida, USA ; Department of Addiction Research & Therapy, Malibu Beach Recovery Center, Malibu Beach, California, USA. ; Department of Psychiatry & Human Integrated Services Unit, University of Vermont Center for Clinical & Translational Science, College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont, USA ; Department of Clinical Neurology, Path Foundation, NY, New York, New York, USA ; Department of Clinical Neurology, Path Foundation, NY, New York, New York, USA ; Department of Personalized Medicine, IGENE, LLC. Austin, Texas, USA ; Dominion Diagnostics, LLC, North Kingstown, Rhode Island, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine and Veterans Administration System, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Psychology (Irvine). 2014 Mar;5(4):282-288. doi: 10.4236/psych.2014.54038.
Understanding the role of neurotransmission in the prefrontal cortex and mesolimbic brain regions has become the subject of intensive neuroscience research worldwide. In the 1970s, our group provided evidence that rats exposed to darkness significantly augmented their alcohol intake. At that time, we proposed that melatonin was the culprit. At around the same time, our laboratory, amongst a few others, proposed that dopamine-adducts with acetaldehyde to induce alcohol intake both in rodents and in humans. While the work in these areas has declined considerably over the years, more recent scientifically sound studies continue to show the importance of these earlier controversial ideas involving alcohol abuse and alcoholism. A review of the literature has provided impetus to systematically access the newer genetic and molecular neurobiological findings relevant to the physiological and psychological motives for high alcohol consumption in animals and humans alike. Thus, we hypothesize that darkness-induced alcohol intake is linked not only to serotonergic-melatonin mechanisms, but also to dopaminergic regulation of brain mesolimbic pathways involving neuronal expression switching in response to long photoperiods affecting gene expression.
了解神经传递在前额叶皮质和中脑边缘脑区中的作用已成为全球神经科学密集研究的主题。20世纪70年代,我们的研究小组提供了证据,表明暴露于黑暗中的大鼠会显著增加酒精摄入量。当时,我们认为褪黑素是罪魁祸首。大约在同一时间,我们的实验室以及其他一些实验室提出,多巴胺与乙醛结合会在啮齿动物和人类中诱导酒精摄入。尽管这些领域的研究在过去几年中大幅减少,但最近一些科学合理的研究继续表明这些早期涉及酒精滥用和酒精中毒的有争议观点的重要性。对文献的综述促使我们系统地研究与动物和人类高酒精消费的生理和心理动机相关的最新遗传和分子神经生物学发现。因此,我们假设黑暗诱导的酒精摄入不仅与血清素-褪黑素机制有关,还与涉及神经元表达转换以响应影响基因表达的长光周期的脑边缘中脑多巴胺能调节有关。