Abstract

Background:Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT) quantifies the extent to which a stimulus that has been associated with reward or punishment alters operant behaviour. In alcohol dependence (AD), the PIT effect serves as a paradigmatic model of cue-induced relapse. Preclinical studies have suggested a critical role of the opioid system in modulating Pavlovian–instrumental interactions. The A118G polymorphism of the OPRM1 gene affects opioid receptor availability and function. Furthermore, this polymorphism interacts with cue-induced approach behaviour and is a potential biomarker for pharmacological treatment response in AD. In this study, we tested whether the OPRM1 polymorphism is associated with the PIT effect and relapse in AD.Methods:Using a PIT task, we examined three independent samples: young healthy subjects (N = 161), detoxified alcohol-dependent patients (N = 186) and age-matched healthy controls (N = 105). We used data from a larger study designed to assess the role of learning mechanisms in the development and maintenance of AD. Subjects were genotyped for the A118G (rs1799971) polymorphism of the OPRM1 gene. Relapse was assessed after three months.Results:In all three samples, participants with the minor OPRM1 G-Allele (G+ carriers) showed increased expression of the PIT effect in the absence of learning differences. Relapse was not associated with the OPRM1 polymorphism. Instead, G+ carriers displaying increased PIT effects were particularly prone to relapse.Conclusion:These results support a role for the opioid system in incentive salience motivation. Furthermore, they inform a mechanistic model of aberrant salience processing and are in line with the pharmacological potential of opioid receptor targets in the treatment of AD.

Highlights

  • Contextual stimuli are important modulators in the way we learn and can promote specific behaviours

  • Demographic, clinical and neuropsychological comparisons between G+ and G− carriers in all three cohorts indicated no group differences (Table 1), except from increased self-reports of impulsivity assessed via BIS-15 (Meule, 2011) in G+ carriers compared to G− carriers in young healthy adults

  • We found no evidence for a functional association between the OPRM1 polymorphism and relapse (χ2(df = 1) = 1.60, p = 0.21)

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Summary

Introduction

Contextual stimuli are important modulators in the way we learn and can promote specific behaviours. Incentive salience attribution is one prominent mechanism underlying several disorders of compulsivity, such as alcohol dependence (AD; Corbit and Janak, 2007) and other addictive disorders (LeBlanc et al, 2012). The A118G polymorphism of the OPRM1 gene affects opioid receptor availability and function. This polymorphism interacts with cue-induced approach behaviour and is a potential biomarker for pharmacological treatment response in AD. We tested whether the OPRM1 polymorphism is associated with the PIT effect and relapse in AD. Conclusion: These results support a role for the opioid system in incentive salience motivation

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