Abstract

Mood disorders are often comorbid with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and play a considerable role in the development and maintenance of alcohol dependence and relapse. Because of this high comorbidity, it is necessary to determine shared and unique genetic factors driving heavy drinking and negative affective behaviors. In order to identify novel pharmacogenetic targets, a bioinformatics analysis was used to quantify the expression of amygdala K+ channel genes that covary with anxiety-related phenotypes in the well-phenotyped and fully sequenced family of BXD strains. We used a model of stress-induced escalation of drinking in alcohol-dependent mice to measure negative affective behaviors during abstinence. A pharmacological approach was used to validate the key bioinformatics findings in alcohol-dependent, stressed mice. Amygdalar expression of Kcnn3 correlated significantly with 40 anxiety-associated phenotypes. Further examination of Kcnn3 expression revealed a strong eigentrait for anxiety-like behaviors and negative correlations with binge-like and voluntary alcohol drinking. Mice treated with chronic intermittent alcohol exposure and repeated swim stress consumed more alcohol in their home cages and showed hypophagia on the novelty-suppressed feeding test during abstinence. Pharmacologically targeting Kcnn gene products with the KCa2 (SK) channel-positive modulator 1-EBIO decreased drinking and reduced feeding latency in alcohol-dependent, stressed mice. Collectively, these validation studies provide central nervous system links into the covariance of stress, negative affective behaviors, and AUD in the BXD strains. Further, the bioinformatics discovery tool is effective in identifying promising targets (i.e., KCa2 channels) for treating alcohol dependence exacerbated by comorbid mood disorders.

Highlights

  • Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a devastating disease that causes significant disruption of brain function and behavior

  • Genetic predictors of anxiety-related phenotypes To identify K+ channel genes that are associated with anxiety-related phenotypes, we performed an unbiased targeted genetic screen using amygdala K+ channel transcript levels and phenotypic data in BXD RI strains of mice

  • We provided evidence for pharmacological validation of the top gene (i.e., Kcnn3) in the chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) × forced swim stress (FSS) model on negative affective behaviors and stress-induced increases in alcohol drinking

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a devastating disease that causes significant disruption of brain function and behavior. AUD is frequently comorbid with affective mood disorders[3,4] and this fact often limits available treatment interventions[5]. The negative affective disturbances that tend to develop during abstinence from alcohol (ethanol) drinking can drive relapse-like behaviors in both humans and rodent models[6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. This is complicated further by preclinical and clinical evidence that links increased drinking with the use of drugs such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

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