4.7 Article

Affective Cue-Induced Escalation of Alcohol Self-Administration and Increased 22-kHz Ultrasonic Vocalizations during Alcohol Withdrawal: Role of Kappa-Opioid Receptors

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 647-654

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2012.229

Keywords

alcohol and alcoholism; cues; kappa-opioid receptor; negative affect; operant self-administration; ultrasonic vocalizations

Funding

  1. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [R01AA020394-01]
  2. Hope for Depression Research Foundation [RGA 11-014]
  3. WSU Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Program

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Negative affect promotes dysregulated alcohol consumption in non-dependent and alcohol-dependent animals, and cues associated with negative affective states induce withdrawal-like symptoms in rats. This study was designed to test the hypotheses that: (1) the kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) system mediates phenotypes related to alcohol withdrawal and withdrawal-like negative affective states and (2) cues associated with negative affective states would result in dysregulated alcohol consumption when subsequently presented alone. To accomplish these goals, intracerebroventricular infusion of the KOR antagonist nor-binaltorphimine (nor-BNI) was assessed for the ability to attenuate the increase in 22-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) associated with alcohol withdrawal and KOR activation in adult male wistar rats. Furthermore, cues associated with a KOR agonist-induced negative affective state were assessed for the ability to dysregulate alcohol consumption and the efficacy of intracerebroventricular KOR antagonism to reduce such dysregulation was evaluated. KOR antagonism blocked the increased number of 22-kHz USVs observed during acute alcohol withdrawal and a KOR agonist (U50,488) resulted in a nor-BNI reversible increase in 22-kHz USVs (mimicking an alcohol-dependent state). Additionally, cues associated with negative affective states resulted in escalated alcohol self-administration, an effect that was nor-BNI sensitive. Taken together, this study implicates negative affective states induced by both alcohol withdrawal and conditioned stimuli as being produced, in part, by activity of the DYN/KOR system. Neuropsychophormacology (2013) 38, 647-654; doi:10.1038/npp.2012.229; published online 5 December 2012

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