Reward and Relapse: Complete Gene-Induced Dissociation in an Animal Model of Alcohol Dependence
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2012-03Metadata
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Quintanilla González, María Elena
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Reward and Relapse: Complete Gene-Induced Dissociation in an Animal Model of Alcohol Dependence
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Abstract
Background: In animal models of continuous alcohol self-administration, in which physical
dependence does not constitute the major factor of ethanol intake, 2 factors likely contribute to
the perpetuation of alcohol self-administration: (i) the rewarding effects of ethanol and (ii) the
contextual conditioning cues that exist along with the process of self-administration. Present studies
are aimed at understanding the relative contribution of these factors on the perpetuation of
heavy alcohol self-administration, as an indication of relapse.
Methods: Wistar-derived UChB high ethanol drinker rats were allowed access to 10% ethanol
and water on a 24-hour basis. In initial studies, an anticatalase shRNA gene-coding lentiviral vector
aimed at inhibiting acetaldehyde generation was administered into the ventral tegmental area
(VTA) of the animals prior to ethanol access. In subsequent studies, the lentiviral vector was
administered to animals, which had consumed ethanol on a 24-hour basis, or a 1-hour basis, after
the animals had reached high levels of ethanol intake for 60 to 80 days. In final studies, quinine
(0.01%) was added to the ethanol solution to alter the conditioning taste ⁄ smell cues of alcohol
that animals had chronically ingested.
Results: Data indicate that the administration of an anticatalase vector into the VTA of naı¨ ve
animals blocked reward and alcohol self-administration, while it was, nevertheless, inactive in
inhibiting alcohol self-administration in rats that had been conditioned to ingest ethanol for over
2 months. The lack of inhibitory effect of the anticatalase vector on ethanol intake in animals
that had chronically self-administered ethanol was fully reversed when the contextual conditioning
cues of the alcohol solution were changed.
Conclusions: Data highlight the importance of conditioning factors in relapse and suggest that
only abolishing or blunting it, along with long-lasting pharmacological treatment to reduce ethanol
reward, may have protracted effects in reducing alcohol self-administration.
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Studies presented were supported by grants from Fondecyt
#1095021, #1080447; the Millennium Scientific Initiative
(P05-001-F; P09-015-F); and NIAAA R01 AA 015421.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/128985
DOI: DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2011.01606.x
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Alcohol Clin Exp Res, Vol 36, No 3, 2012: pp 517–522
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