Charleston Alcohol Research Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
Charleston Alcohol Research Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina; Department of Neuroscience, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina; Ralph H. Johnson Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Charleston, South Carolina.
Biol Psychiatry. 2022 Jun 15;91(12):1019-1028. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.01.002. Epub 2022 Jan 10.
While there is high comorbidity of stress-related disorders and alcohol use disorder, few effective treatments are available and elucidating underlying neurobiological mechanisms has been hampered by a general lack of reliable animal models. Here, we use a novel mouse model demonstrating robust and reproducible stress-enhanced alcohol drinking to examine the role of dynorphin/kappa opioid receptor (DYN/KOR) activity within the extended amygdala in mediating this stress-alcohol interaction.
Mice received repeated weekly cycles of chronic intermittent ethanol exposure alternating with weekly drinking sessions ± forced swim stress exposure. Pdyn messenger RNA expression was measured in the central amygdala (CeA), and DYN-expressing CeA neurons were then targeted for chemogenetic inhibition. Finally, a KOR antagonist was microinjected into the CeA or bed nucleus of the stria terminalis to examine the role of KOR signaling in promoting stress-enhanced drinking.
Stress (forced swim stress) selectively increased alcohol drinking in mice with a history of chronic intermittent ethanol exposure, and this was accompanied by elevated Pdyn messenger RNA levels in the CeA. Targeted chemogenetic silencing of DYN-expressing CeA neurons blocked stress-enhanced drinking, and KOR antagonism in the CeA or bed nucleus of the stria terminalis significantly reduced stress-induced elevated alcohol consumption without altering moderate intake in control mice.
Using a novel and robust model of stress-enhanced alcohol drinking, a significant role for DYN/KOR activity within extended amygdala circuitry in mediating this effect was demonstrated, thereby providing further evidence that the DYN/KOR system may be a valuable target in the development of more effective treatments for individuals presenting with comorbidity of stress-related disorders and alcohol use disorder.
尽管与应激相关的障碍和酒精使用障碍存在高度共病性,但可用的有效治疗方法很少,并且由于缺乏可靠的动物模型,阐明潜在的神经生物学机制一直受到阻碍。在这里,我们使用一种新的小鼠模型,该模型表现出强大且可重复的应激增强酒精摄入,以研究扩展杏仁核内强啡肽/κ 阿片受体 (DYN/KOR) 活性在介导这种应激-酒精相互作用中的作用。
小鼠接受每周重复的慢性间歇性乙醇暴露周期,交替进行每周的饮酒期±强迫游泳应激暴露。测量中央杏仁核 (CeA) 中的 Pdyn 信使 RNA 表达,然后针对 DYN 表达的 CeA 神经元进行化学遗传抑制。最后,将 KOR 拮抗剂微注射到 CeA 或终纹床核中,以研究 KOR 信号在促进应激增强饮酒中的作用。
应激(强迫游泳应激)选择性地增加了有慢性间歇性乙醇暴露史的小鼠的酒精摄入量,并且这伴随着 CeA 中 Pdyn 信使 RNA 水平的升高。靶向化学遗传沉默 DYN 表达的 CeA 神经元阻断了应激增强的饮酒,而 CeA 或终纹床核中的 KOR 拮抗作用显著降低了应激诱导的酒精摄入量升高,而不改变对照小鼠的适度摄入量。
使用一种新型且强大的应激增强酒精摄入模型,证明了扩展杏仁核电路中 DYN/KOR 活性在介导这种作用中的重要作用,从而进一步证明 DYN/KOR 系统可能是开发针对应激相关障碍和酒精使用障碍共病患者的更有效治疗方法的有价值的靶点。