4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Role of GABAA α5-containing receptors in ethanol reward:: The effects of targeted gene deletion, and a selective inverse agonist

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 526, Issue 1-3, Pages 240-250

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2005.09.031

Keywords

ethanol abuse; reward; knockout; inverse agonist

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GABA(A) receptors containing alpha 5 subunits have been suggested to mediate the rewarding effects of ethanol. We tested this hypothesis in mice with deletion of alpha 5 subunits. alpha 5 knockout mice did not differ from wildtypes in operant responding for. 10% ethanol/10% sucrose, but responded less for 10% sucrose. The benzodiazepine (BZ) site inverse agonist, Ro 15-4513, has higher affinity for GABA(A) receptors containing 5 subunits and dose-dependently (0-27 mg/kg, i.p.). reduced lever pressing for ethanol/sucrose in wildtype mice, but had less effect in knockout mice; lever pressing for sucrose was unaffected. These data suggest that alpha 5 subunits are not essential for ethanol reward, but the reduction of operant responding for ethanol by Ro 15-4513 is mediated by alpha 5-containing GABA(A) receptors. In measures of ethanol consumption, alpha 5 knockout mice did not differ from wildtypes at low ethanol concentrations (2-8%), but consumed less ethanol at higher concentrations these differences were not attributable to increased behavioural disruption of the knockout by ethanol, since no differences were seen in sensitivity to ethanol's sedative or ataxic effects. Ro 15-4513's ability to reduce ethanol consumption was unaffected, suggesting that this effect is not mediated by the alpha 5 subtype. Secondly, we tested the ability of a novel u5-efficacy-selective benzodiazepine receptor ligand, alpha 5IA-II, that possesses greater inverse agonist activity at alpha 5- than at alpha 1-, alpha 2- or alpha 3-containing GABA(A) receptors, to influence operant responding. alpha 5IA-II (0.03-3 mg/kg) dose-dependently decreased lever pressing for 10% ethanol, the minimally effective dose of I mg/kg, corresponding to over 90% receptor occupancy, but did not affect lever pressing for 4% sucrose. Although inverse agonists acting at alpha 5-containing receptors reduce ethanol self-administration, alpha 5 subunits may not be essential to signaling ethanol reward. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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