Addiction Neuroscience, Department of Psychology and Indiana Alcohol Research Center, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States.
Addiction Neuroscience, Department of Psychology and Indiana Alcohol Research Center, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States.
Alcohol. 2021 Dec;97:31-39. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.09.004. Epub 2021 Sep 20.
Previous research has demonstrated the utility of subanesthetic doses of ketamine in decreasing binge (Drinking-in-the-Dark, or DID) 20% alcohol intake in female inbred (C57BL/6J) mice when administered 12 hours prior to alcohol access (Crowley et al., 2019). In the current study, we assess the efficacy of a similar ketamine pretreatment using male and female selectively bred, crossed High Alcohol Preferring (cHAP) mice, which also drink to intoxication, but are not inbred. We hypothesized that ketamine would decrease binge alcohol intake without impacting locomotor activity.
Subjects were 28 adult cHAP mice. Mice first received a 2-week DID drinking history using 2-h/day alcohol access. On day 12, prior to ketamine treatment, the average blood ethanol concentration (BEC) was 130 mg/dL, confirming that mice reliably reached intoxicating BECs. On day 15, mice were given 0, 3, or 10 mg/kg of ketamine 12 hours prior to the DID session. Ketamine did not decrease total (2-h) alcohol consumption or locomotion. Interestingly, the 10 mg/kg dose of ketamine did alter the drinking pattern in male mice, decreasing front-loading for a single day. We opted to then increase the doses to 32 or 100 mg/kg (i.e., an anesthetic dose) two days after the initial treatment, keeping the saline control. Mice of both sexes decreased total binge alcohol intake at the 100 mg/kg dose only, but again, the effect only lasted one day.
The current study found that cHAP mice reached more than double the BECs observed in C57BL/6J mice during DID, but did not respond to subanesthetic ketamine. Modest efficacy was found for ketamine pretreatment at anesthetic doses. Differences in findings may be due to differential intake during DID, or genetic differences between C57Bl/6J mice and cHAP mice. Drug efficacy in multiple models is important for discovering reliable pharmacotherapies for alcoholism.
先前的研究表明,亚麻醉剂量的氯胺酮可减少雌性近交系(C57BL/6J)小鼠在饮酒(暗饮,即 DID)20%酒精摄入,当在酒精摄入前 12 小时给予氯胺酮时(Crowley 等人,2019)。在当前的研究中,我们评估了使用雄性和雌性选择性繁殖的交叉高酒精偏好(cHAP)小鼠进行类似氯胺酮预处理的疗效,这些小鼠也会喝醉,但不是近交系。我们假设氯胺酮会在不影响运动活动的情况下减少 binge 酒精摄入。
研究对象为 28 只成年 cHAP 小鼠。小鼠首先接受为期 2 周的 DID 饮酒史,每天进行 2 小时的酒精摄入。在第 12 天,在接受氯胺酮治疗之前,平均血乙醇浓度(BEC)为 130mg/dL,证实小鼠可靠地达到了醉酒的 BEC。在第 15 天,小鼠在 DID 期间前 12 小时给予 0、3 或 10mg/kg 的氯胺酮。氯胺酮并未减少总(2 小时)酒精摄入量或运动。有趣的是,10mg/kg 的氯胺酮剂量改变了雄性小鼠的饮酒模式,仅一天就减少了前加载。我们选择在初始治疗后两天将剂量增加到 32 或 100mg/kg(即麻醉剂量),同时保留盐水对照。两种性别的小鼠仅在 100mg/kg 剂量下减少了总 binge 酒精摄入量,但同样,这种效果仅持续一天。
当前的研究发现,cHAP 小鼠在 DID 期间达到了 C57BL/6J 小鼠观察到的 BEC 的两倍多,但对亚麻醉氯胺酮没有反应。在麻醉剂量下,氯胺酮预处理显示出适度的疗效。研究结果的差异可能是由于 DID 期间的摄入量不同,或者 C57Bl/6J 小鼠和 cHAP 小鼠之间的遗传差异。在多种模型中发现药物疗效对于发现治疗酒精中毒的可靠药物治疗方法很重要。