4.5 Article

Associations between alcohol use and peripheral, genetic, and epigenetic markers of oxytocin in a general sample of young and older adults

Journal

BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/brb3.2425

Keywords

alcohol; DNA methylation; genetic predisposition; genotype; oxytocin; peripheral; polymorphism; substance use

Funding

  1. University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Institute [UL1 TR000064]
  2. Scientific Research Network on DecisionNeuroscience and Aging [R24AG039350]
  3. NIH/NIA [R01AG059809]
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse [T32DA035167]
  5. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [T32AA025877]

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This study evaluated the relationship between alcohol use and oxytocin (OT) activity and found significant associations between the two, supporting the involvement of the OT system in alcohol use.
Introduction Human and nonhuman animal research suggests that greater oxytocin (OT) activity is protective against harmful substance use. Most research on this topic is preclinical, with few studies evaluating the association between substance use and individual differences in the human OT system. The present study sought to fill this gap by evaluating the relationship between alcohol use and multiple biological measures of OT activity in an overall low to moderate-drinking sample. Method As part of a larger study, generally healthy young (n = 51) and older (n = 53) adults self-reported whether they regularly used alcohol and how much alcohol they consumed per week. Participants also provided blood samples from which peripheral OT, and in an age-heterogeneous subset of participants (n = 56) variation in the oxytocin receptor gene (the OXTR rs53576 polymorphism) and OXTR DNA methylation levels (at cytosine-guanine dinucleotide sites -860, -924, -934), were obtained. Results A-allele carriers of the OXTR rs53579 polymorphism were less likely to regularly consume alcohol. Among regular alcohol consumers, number of alcoholic drinks per week was positively associated with peripheral OT in regression models excluding observations of high influence (postdiagnostic models). Number of alcoholic drinks per week was consistently negatively associated with OXTR DNA methylation at site -860; and with OXTR DNA methylation at site -924 in postdiagnostic models. Conclusions The significant associations between alcohol use and individual differences in OT activity support the involvement of the OT system in alcohol use, which most likely reflect the role of OT when alcohol use is under control of its rewarding properties and/or the acute impacts of alcohol on the OT system. Additional research with markers of OT activity and alcohol use, particularly longitudinal, is needed to clarify the bidirectional effects of OT and alcohol use in moderate to harmful drinking and dependence.

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