4.7 Article

Intermittent-access operant alcohol self-administration promotes binge-like drinking and drinking despite negative consequences in male and female heterogeneous stock rats

Journal

NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 235, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2023.109564

Keywords

Intermittent access; Alcohol; Self -administration; Operant; Reinforcement; Sex differences

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The study found that intermittent access to self-administered alcohol is associated with more intense alcohol consumption, which can be used to develop preclinical models of binge-like alcohol consumption in Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD). Researchers successfully trained rodents to have intermittent access to alcohol, gradually shortening the duration of access periods, resulting in more intensified drinking behavior. This research method is of great significance for understanding the mechanisms of alcohol use disorders and binge drinking behavior.
The study of Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD) in preclinical models is hampered by difficulty in training rodents to voluntarily consume high levels of alcohol. The intermittency of alcohol access/exposure is well known to modulate alcohol consumption (e.g., alcohol deprivation effect, intermittent-access two-bottle-choice) and recently, intermittent access operant self-administration procedures have been used to produce more intense and binge-like self-administration of intravenous psychostimulant and opioid drugs. In the present study, we sought to systematically manipulate the intermittency of operant self-administered alcohol access to determine the feasibility of promoting more intensified, binge-like alcohol consumption. To this end, 24 male and 23 female NIH Heterogeneous Stock rats were trained to self-administer 10% w/v ethanol, before being split into three different-access groups. Short Access (ShA) rats continued receiving 30-min training sessions, Long Access (LgA) rats received 16-h sessions, and Intermittent Access (IntA) rats received 16-h sessions, wherein the hourly alcohol-access periods were shortened over sessions, down to 2 min. IntA rats demonstrated an increasingly binge-like pattern of alcohol drinking in response to restriction of alcohol access, while ShA and LgA rats maintained stable intake. All groups were tested on orthogonal measures of alcohol-seeking and quininepunished alcohol drinking. The IntA rats displayed the most punishment-resistant drinking. In a separate experiment, we replicated our main finding, that intermittent access promotes a more binge-like pattern of alcohol self-administration using 8 male and 8 female Wistar rats. In conclusion, intermittent access to selfadministered alcohol promotes more intensified self-administration. This approach may be useful in developing preclinical models of binge-like alcohol consumption in AUD.

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