4.1 Article

Assessing effects of oxytocin on alcohol consumption in socially housed prairie voles using radio frequency tracking

Journal

ADDICTION BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/adb.12893

Keywords

alcoholism; alcohol use disorder; Edinger-Westphal nucleus; Microtus ochrogaster; oxytocin; social environment

Funding

  1. NIH [RO1 AA019793, T32 AA007468]

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The study demonstrates that oxytocin can reduce alcohol consumption in socially housed prairie voles, indicating its potential in treating alcohol use disorder. This suggests that the effectiveness of other pharmacotherapies in preclinical studies can be tested in socially housed animals, similar to clinical trials in humans.
Alcohol use disorder affects millions of people each year. Currently approved pharmacotherapies have limited success in treating this disorder. Evidence suggests that this lack of success is partly due to how these pharmacotherapies are tested in preclinical settings. The vast majority of preclinical studies assessing the effects of pharmacotherapies on alcohol or drug self-administration are done in individually housed animals. However, it is known that alcohol and drug intake are heavily influenced by social settings. Here, we adapted radio frequency tracking technology to determine the effects of oxytocin, a potential therapy for alcohol use disorder, on alcohol consumption in socially housed male and female prairie voles. Voluntary alcohol consumption in these animals resulted in high daily alcohol intakes, blood ethanol concentrations that are considered intoxicating, and central changes in FosB immunoreactivity, indicative of changes in neural activity. Prairie voles that received oxytocin temporarily reduced alcohol consumption but not alcohol preference, compared with control prairie voles regardless whether their cagemates received a similar treatment or not. Our results demonstrate that oxytocin can decrease consummatory behaviors in the presence of peers that are not receiving this treatment, and therefore, its potential use in clinical trials is warranted. Moreover, effectiveness of other pharmacotherapies in preclinical studies can be tested in mixed-treatment socially housed animals similarly to clinical studies in humans.

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