Abstract
Opioid receptor antagonist naltrexone reduces alcohol consumption and relapse in both humans and rodents. This study investigated whether hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons (producing beta-endorphin and melanocortins) play a role in alcohol drinking behaviors. Both male and female mice with targeted deletion of two neuronal Pomc enhancers nPE1 and nPE2 (nPE−/−), resulting in hypothalamic-specific POMC deficiency, were studied in short-access (4-h/day) drinking-in-the-dark (DID, alcohol in one bottle, intermittent access (IA, 24-h cycles of alcohol access every other day, alcohol vs. water in a two-bottle choice) and alcohol deprivation effect (ADE) models. Wild-type nPE+/+ exposed to 1-week DID rapidly established stable alcohol drinking behavior with more intake in females, whereas nPE−/− mice of both sexes had less intake and less preference. Although nPE−/− showed less saccharin intake and preference than nPE+/+, there was no genotype difference in sucrose intake or preference in the DID paradigm. After 3-week IA, nPE+/+ gradually escalated to high alcohol intake and preference, with more intake in females, whereas nPE−/− showed less escalation. Pharmacological blockade of mu-opioid receptors with naltrexone reduced intake in nPE+/+ in a dose-dependent manner, but had blunted effects in nPE−/− of both sexes. When alcohol was presented again after 1-week abstinence from IA, nPE+/+ of both sexes displayed significant increases in alcohol intake (ADE or relapse-like drinking), with more pronounced ADE in females, whereas nPE−/− did not show ADE in either sex. Our results suggest that neuronal POMC is involved in modulation of alcohol ‘binge’ drinking, escalation and ‘relapse’, probably via hypothalamic-mediated mechanisms, with sex differences.
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Zhou, Y., Rubinstein, M., Low, M. J., & Kreek, M. J. (2017). Hypothalamic-specific proopiomelanocortin deficiency reduces alcohol drinking in male and female mice. Genes, Brain and Behavior, 16(4), 449–461. https://doi.org/10.1111/gbb.12362
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