Abstract
The possible role of the endogenous kinins in the control of alcohol intake was assessed in two experiments. In Experiment 1, naive rats, maintained on ad lib food and water, were given daily 40-min access to a 6% (w/v) alcohol solution and water. Daily intraperitoneal (IP) injections of captopril (20 mg/kg) significantly reduced alcohol intake, while pretreatment with subcutaneous (SC) injections of the bradykinin antagonist [ D-Phe 7]-bradykinin (100–300 μg/kg) attenuated the suppressive effect of captopril on alcohol intake. The saline vehicle or the bradykinin antagonist alone did not alter alcohol intake. In Experiment 2, bradykinin was administered daily at 100, 200, and 400 μg/kg doses SC either alone or in combination with captopril 10 mg/kg IP. Neither bradykinin nor captopril by themselves changed alcohol or water intake. Bradykinin combined with captopril stimulated water intake and reduced alcohol intake by up to 70%. This effect was not due to drug-induced changes in the pharmacokinetics of alcohol. The angiotensin II receptor antagonist [Sar 1, Thr 8]-angiotensin II at 250 and 500 μg/kg SC attenuated the stimulation of water intake but not the reduction in alcohol intake. It is suggested that by inhibiting kininase II, ACE inhibitors extend the duration of action of bradykinin and thereby unmask a potent inhibition of alcohol intake mediated by kinins-an effect that is dissociable from the accompanying stimulation of water intake. Taken together, these results point to an involvement of the kinin system in the regulation of alcohol intake and in particular to a role of bradykinin in the suppressive effect of ACE inhibitors on alcohol intake.
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