Background And Purpose: Alcohol and nicotine use disorders are commonly comorbid. Both alcohol and nicotine can activate opioid systems in reward-related brain regions, leading to adaptive changes in opioid signalling upon chronic exposure. The potential role of these adaptations for comorbidity is presently unknown. Here, we examined the contribution of μ and κ-opioid receptors to nicotine-induced escalation of alcohol self-administration in rats.
Experimental Approach: Chronic nicotine was tested on alcohol self-administration and motivation to obtain alcohol. We then tested the effect of the κ antagonist CERC-501 and the preferential μ receptor antagonist naltrexone on basal and nicotine-escalated alcohol self-administration. To probe μ or κ receptor adaptations, receptor binding and G-protein coupling assays were performed in reward-related brain regions. Finally, dopaminergic activity in response to alcohol was examined, using phosphorylation of DARPP-32 in nucleus accumbens as a biomarker.
Key Results: Nicotine robustly induced escalation of alcohol self-administration and motivation to obtain alcohol. This was blocked by naltrexone but not by CERC-501. Escalation of alcohol self-administration was associated with decreased DAMGO-stimulated μ receptor signalling in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and decreased pDARPP-32 in the nucleus accumbens shell in response to alcohol.
Conclusions And Implications: Collectively, these results suggest that nicotine contributes to escalate alcohol self-administration through a dysregulation of μ receptor activity in the VTA. These data imply that targeting μ rather than κ receptors may be the preferred pharmacotherapeutic approach for the treatment of alcohol use disorder when nicotine use contributes to alcohol consumption.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7484560 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bph.15210 | DOI Listing |
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