Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1083, United States.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1083, United States.
Alcohol. 2022 Feb;98:1-7. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.10.001. Epub 2021 Oct 30.
Nonhuman primate models of alcohol use disorder (AUD) frequently utilize schedule-induced polydipsia to initiate ethanol drinking. Previous research has demonstrated that specific characteristics of drinking during the final phase of induction, in which monkeys consume 1.5 g/kg of ethanol per day, can predict whether monkeys become heavy or light drinkers when they subsequently have free access to ethanol (22 hours per day; Baker, Farro, Gonzales, Helms, & Grant, 2017; Grant et al., 2008). A monkey's position in the social dominance hierarchy is another factor associated with ethanol drinking in nonhuman primates; lower social status is associated with higher ethanol intakes. In the present study, characteristics of drinking during induction were measured in 12 male cynomolgus monkeys living in three established social groups (4 monkeys per group). All monkeys were induced to consume water, then increasing doses of ethanol (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 g/kg) for 30 sessions per dose using a 300-s fixed-time schedule of food pellet delivery. Drinking sessions occurred five days per week and monkeys were group-housed on the other two days. Contrary to our hypothesis that subordinate monkeys would show characteristics of drinking during the last phase of induction that were predictive of later heavy drinking, no significant differences were observed between dominant and subordinate monkeys in any phase of induction. When ethanol availability was subsequently increased to 22 hours per day for 5 weeks, the intakes of subordinate- and dominant-ranked monkeys diverged, with higher intakes on average in subordinates. Several factors unique to the conditions of induction may have obscured any influence of social rank, including the limited duration of sessions and limited maximal ethanol intake. The data support the conclusion that the effects of social rank on ethanol consumption require unrestricted access to ethanol.
非人类灵长类动物的酒精使用障碍(AUD)模型通常利用日程诱导性多饮来开始饮酒。先前的研究表明,在诱导的最后阶段,即猴子每天摄入 1.5g/kg 的乙醇时,猴子的具体饮酒特征可以预测它们在随后有自由接触乙醇(每天 22 小时)时是成为重度饮酒者还是轻度饮酒者(Baker、Farro、Gonzales、Helms 和 Grant,2017;Grant 等人,2008)。非人类灵长类动物中,猴子在社会统治等级中的地位也是与乙醇饮酒相关的另一个因素;较低的社会地位与较高的乙醇摄入量有关。在本研究中,12 只雄性食蟹猴(Cynomolgus 猴)在三个既定的社会群体中(每组 4 只猴子),测量了诱导期间的饮酒特征。所有猴子都被诱导饮用清水,然后在 30 个时间段内摄入递增剂量的乙醇(0.5、1.0 和 1.5g/kg),每个剂量都采用 300s 的固定时间食物球传递时间表。饮水时间为每周五天,另外两天猴子被分组饲养。与我们的假设相反,即从属猴子在诱导的最后阶段表现出的饮酒特征可以预测后来的重度饮酒,但在诱导的任何阶段,优势和从属猴子之间都没有观察到显著差异。当随后将乙醇的供应增加到每天 22 小时,持续 5 周时,从属和优势排名猴子的摄入量出现分歧,从属猴子的平均摄入量更高。诱导条件中的几个独特因素可能掩盖了社会等级的任何影响,包括有限的会议时间和有限的最大乙醇摄入量。这些数据支持这样的结论,即社会等级对乙醇消费的影响需要不受限制地接触乙醇。