Spoelder Marcia, Hesseling Peter, Baars Annemarie M, Lozeman-van 't Klooster José G, Rotte Marthe D, Vanderschuren Louk J M J, Lesscher Heidi M B
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Animals in Science and Society, Division of Behavioural Neuroscience, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Department of Translational Neuroscience (LJMJV), Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2015 Dec;39(12):2427-37. doi: 10.1111/acer.12891.
Alcohol is one of the most commonly used psychoactive substances. Prolonged alcohol use can result in alcohol use disorder (AUD), characterized by excessive and compulsive alcohol consumption. Importantly, however, the development of AUD only happens in a minority of individuals who consume alcohol. To understand the individual vulnerability for AUD, models that capture both the individual variability in alcohol consumption and the transition from casual to compulsive alcohol use are essential.
Individual variability in voluntary alcohol intake and the preference for alcohol were assessed under continuous alcohol access (CAA) and intermittent-every-other-day alcohol access (IAA) schedules in the home cage using outbred Lister Hooded rats. Subsequently, the reinforcing properties of alcohol were tested in an operant setting. In subsequent experiments, we performed a quinine adulteration experiment to assess inflexible alcohol consumption and blood alcohol levels (BALs) were assessed after voluntary alcohol consumption.
We found marked individual differences in alcohol consumption and preference under both access schedules, whereby subgroups of high- and low-alcohol-drinking rats (HD and LD) could be identified. HD with IAA increased their alcohol intake over days in the first month, whereas LD did not. Moreover, when alcohol access time was extended from 7 to 24 h/d for rats with IAA, alcohol intake profoundly increased in HD with IAA, whereas LD with IAA maintained low levels of alcohol intake. Furthermore, HD earned more alcohol than LD under both fixed ratio and progressive ratio schedules of reinforcement. We further found that HD continued their intake of a quinine-adulterated alcohol solution to a larger extent than LD and HD showed higher BALs after 30 minutes of alcohol consumption.
These profound individual differences in alcohol intake, reinforcement, motivation, and AUD-like behavior provide a promising tool to unravel the neurobehavioral underpinnings of individual vulnerability for AUD.
酒精是最常用的精神活性物质之一。长期饮酒会导致酒精使用障碍(AUD),其特征是过度和强迫性饮酒。然而,重要的是,AUD仅在少数饮酒者中发生。为了了解AUD的个体易感性,能够捕捉饮酒个体差异以及从偶尔饮酒到强迫性饮酒转变的模型至关重要。
使用远交系利斯特戴帽大鼠,在家庭饲养笼中,通过连续酒精摄入(CAA)和隔日间歇性酒精摄入(IAA)方案,评估自愿酒精摄入量和对酒精的偏好的个体差异。随后,在操作性环境中测试酒精的强化特性。在后续实验中,我们进行了奎宁掺假实验以评估顽固的酒精消费情况,并在自愿饮酒后评估血液酒精水平(BALs)。
我们发现在两种摄入方案下,酒精消费和偏好存在显著的个体差异,据此可以识别出高饮酒量和低饮酒量大鼠亚组(HD和LD)。采用IAA的HD在第一个月内酒精摄入量随时间增加,而LD则没有。此外,当IAA大鼠的酒精摄入时间从7小时延长至24小时/天时,采用IAA的HD酒精摄入量大幅增加,而采用IAA的LD酒精摄入量维持在低水平。此外,在固定比率和累进比率强化方案下,HD比LD获得更多酒精。我们还进一步发现,HD比LD更持续地摄入奎宁掺假酒精溶液,并且在饮酒30分钟后,HD的BALs更高。
这些在酒精摄入、强化、动机和类AUD行为方面的深刻个体差异,为揭示AUD个体易感性的神经行为基础提供了一个有前景的工具。