Zhou Y, Rubinstein M, Low M J, Kreek M J
Laboratory of the Biology of Addictive Diseases, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA.
INGEBI/CONICET, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Genes Brain Behav. 2017 Apr;16(4):449-461. doi: 10.1111/gbb.12362. Epub 2017 Jan 17.
Opioid receptor antagonist naltrexone reduces alcohol consumption and relapse in both humans and rodents. This study investigated whether hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons (producing beta-endorphin and melanocortins) play a role in alcohol drinking behaviors. Both male and female mice with targeted deletion of two neuronal Pomc enhancers nPE1 and nPE2 (nPE-/-), resulting in hypothalamic-specific POMC deficiency, were studied in short-access (4-h/day) drinking-in-the-dark (DID, alcohol in one bottle, intermittent access (IA, 24-h cycles of alcohol access every other day, alcohol vs. water in a two-bottle choice) and alcohol deprivation effect (ADE) models. Wild-type nPE+/+ exposed to 1-week DID rapidly established stable alcohol drinking behavior with more intake in females, whereas nPE-/- mice of both sexes had less intake and less preference. Although nPE-/- showed less saccharin intake and preference than nPE+/+, there was no genotype difference in sucrose intake or preference in the DID paradigm. After 3-week IA, nPE+/+ gradually escalated to high alcohol intake and preference, with more intake in females, whereas nPE-/- showed less escalation. Pharmacological blockade of mu-opioid receptors with naltrexone reduced intake in nPE+/+ in a dose-dependent manner, but had blunted effects in nPE-/- of both sexes. When alcohol was presented again after 1-week abstinence from IA, nPE+/+ of both sexes displayed significant increases in alcohol intake (ADE or relapse-like drinking), with more pronounced ADE in females, whereas nPE-/- did not show ADE in either sex. Our results suggest that neuronal POMC is involved in modulation of alcohol 'binge' drinking, escalation and 'relapse', probably via hypothalamic-mediated mechanisms, with sex differences.
阿片受体拮抗剂纳曲酮可减少人类和啮齿动物的酒精摄入量及复饮情况。本研究调查了下丘脑促阿片黑素细胞皮质素(POMC)神经元(产生β-内啡肽和促黑素细胞激素)在饮酒行为中是否起作用。对雄性和雌性小鼠进行了研究,这些小鼠的两个神经元POMC增强子nPE1和nPE2(nPE-/-)被靶向缺失,导致下丘脑特异性POMC缺乏,研究采用短时间接触(每天4小时)黑暗中饮酒(DID,一瓶酒精,间歇性接触(IA,每隔一天有24小时的酒精接触周期,两瓶选择中酒精与水)和酒精剥夺效应(ADE)模型。野生型nPE+/+暴露于1周的DID中会迅速建立稳定的饮酒行为,雌性摄入量更多,而两性的nPE-/-小鼠摄入量较少且偏好较低。尽管nPE-/-显示出比nPE+/+更少的糖精摄入量和偏好,但在DID范式中蔗糖摄入量或偏好没有基因型差异。经过3周的IA后,nPE+/+逐渐增加到高酒精摄入量和偏好,雌性摄入量更多,而nPE-/-显示出较少的增加。用纳曲酮对μ-阿片受体进行药理阻断以剂量依赖性方式降低了nPE+/+的摄入量,但对两性的nPE-/-影响减弱。当从IA戒酒1周后再次提供酒精时,两性的nPE+/+酒精摄入量均显著增加(ADE或复饮样饮酒),雌性的ADE更明显,而nPE-/-在两性中均未显示出ADE。我们的结果表明,神经元POMC可能通过下丘脑介导的机制参与酒精“暴饮”、饮酒量增加和“复饮”的调节,存在性别差异。