Abstract

IntroductionStudies in laboratory animals and humans indicate that endogenous opioids play an important role in regulating the rewarding value of various drugs, including ethanol (EtOH). Indeed, opioid antagonists are currently a front‐line treatment for alcoholism in humans. Although roles for mu‐ and delta‐opioid receptors have been characterized, the contribution of kappa‐opioid receptors (KORs) is less clear. There is evidence that changes in KOR system function can decrease or increase EtOH drinking, depending on test conditions. For example, female mice lacking preprodynorphin – the precursor to the endogenous KOR ligand dynorphin – have reduced EtOH intake. Considering that KORs can regulate dopamine (DA) transmission, we hypothesized that KORs expressed on DA neurons would play a prominent role in EtOH intake in females.MethodsWe used a Cre/loxP recombination strategy to ablate KORs throughout the body or specifically on dopamine uptake transporter (DAT)‐expressing neurons to investigate the role of KORs on preference for and intake of EtOH (2‐bottle choice), the transition from moderate to excessive EtOH drinking (intermittent EtOH access), and binge EtOH drinking (drinking in the dark [DID]).Results KOR deletion decreased preference for EtOH, although this effect was less pronounced when EtOH intake increased beyond relatively low levels.DiscussionOur findings indicate that KOR activation increases EtOH drinking via effects mediated, at least in part, by KORs on DA neurons. While the mechanisms of this regulation remain unknown, previous work suggests that alterations in negative reinforcement processes or sensitivity to the sensory properties of EtOH can affect preference and intake.

Highlights

  • Studies in laboratory animals and humans indicate that endogenous opioids play an important role in regulating the rewarding value of various drugs, including ethanol (EtOH)

  • We examined the role of kappa-­opioid receptors (KORs) in EtOH drinking in females, using two lines of mutant KOR mice in paradigms designed to model general preference for and intake of EtOH (2 bottle choice paradigm), escalation of EtOH drinking, and binge EtOH drinking without inducing dependence

  • Both the constitutive knockout line (KOR−/−), in which KORs are ablated throughout the body, and our conditional line (DAT-­KORlox/lox), in which KORs are ablated in dopamine uptake transporter (DAT)-­expressing cells only, exhibited significant decreases in EtOH preference in a two-­bottle choice paradigm

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Endogenous opioids are involved in a variety of reward-­related behaviors. An important role for endogenous opioids in regulating the. KOR antagonists reduce excessive alcohol consumption (Barson et al, 2010; Walker, Zorrilla, & Koob, 2011) Recent conceptualizations reconcile these seemingly disparate findings (i.e., KOR activation implicated in both increased and decreased drinking) by proposing that EtOH upregulates expression of dynorphin, an endogenous KOR ligand (Chavkin, James, & Goldstein, 1982) often associated with states of stress and dysphoria (see Bruchas, Land, & Chavkin, 2010; Van’t Veer & Carlezon, 2013). Female (but not male) mice lacking preprodynorphin, the precursor for dynorphin, show decreases in preference and consumption of EtOH in a two-­bottle choice test compared to wild-­type littermates (Blednov, Walker, Martinez, & Harris, 2006) These data suggest that KOR activation can play an especially important role in EtOH drinking behavior in females. These procedures differentially provide metrics that reflect EtOH preference and intake patterns

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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