A neural substrate of compulsive alcohol use

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Abstract

Alcohol intake remains controlled in a majority of users but becomes "compulsive,"i.e., continues despite adverse consequences, in a minority who develop alcohol addiction. Here, using a footshock-punished alcohol self-administration procedure, we screened a large population of outbred rats to identify those showing compulsivity operationalized as punishment-resistant self-administration. Using unsupervised clustering, we found that this behavior emerged as a stable trait in a subpopulation of rats and was associated with activity of a brain network that included central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA). Activity of PKCδ+ inhibitory neurons in the lateral subdivision of CeA (CeL) accounted for ∼75% of variance in punishment-resistant alcohol taking. Activity-dependent tagging, followed by chemogenetic inhibition of neurons activated during punishment-resistant self-administration, suppressed alcohol taking, as did a virally mediated shRNA knockdown of PKCδ in CeA. These findings identify a previously unknown mechanism for a core element of alcohol addiction and point to a novel candidate therapeutic target.

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Domi, E., Xu, L., Toivainen, S., Nordeman, A., Gobbo, F., Venniro, M., … Heilig, M. (2021). A neural substrate of compulsive alcohol use. Science Advances, 7(34). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abg9045

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