内源性阿片类药物和多巴胺在酒精中毒中的意义:人类和基础科学研究。

C Gianoulakis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们研究了内源性阿片系统及其在介导乙醇强化效应中的作用,乙醇强化效应导致高乙醇消耗,这是个体对过量乙醇消耗易感性的生化标记。我们使用有[高风险(HR)]和没有[低风险(LR)]酗酒家族史的人类受试者进行研究,以选择性饲养高或低乙醇消耗量的实验动物作为补充。与LR受试者相比,HR受试者的基础血浆β -内啡肽水平较低,但暴露于乙醇后β -内啡肽的释放更为明显。动物实验结果表明,在基础条件下,酒精偏好(C57BL/6)小鼠(类似于HR人类受试者)比酒精避免(DBA/2)小鼠(类似于LR人类受试者)下丘脑β -内啡肽活性水平更高。然而,C57BL/6小鼠在暴露于乙醇后,下丘脑β -内啡肽的释放比DBA/2小鼠更明显。因此,尽管人类和动物酒精中毒模型的下丘脑-内啡肽系统活性在基础条件下有所不同,但在两种模型中,暴露于乙醇后下丘脑-内啡肽系统活性均有所增强。我们还进行了比较乙醇偏好动物(如C57BL/6小鼠和ALKO-alcohol (AA)大鼠)和酒精回避动物(如DBA/2小鼠和ALKO-non-alcohol (ANA)大鼠)大脑中阿片受体密度和分布的研究。有趣的是,我们观察到,在已知对介导强化过程重要的不同大脑区域,C57BL/6小鼠的δ -阿片受体密度高于DBA/2小鼠,而AA大鼠的μ -阿片受体密度高于ANA大鼠。因此,在偏爱乙醇的动物中,暴露于乙醇后β -内啡肽的释放增加与大脑中负责强化的重要区域(如伏隔核和腹侧被盖区)的δ -或μ -阿片受体密度增加有关,并可能与多巴胺能系统相互作用,促进乙醇的强化特性,导致过度饮酒和酗酒。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implications of endogenous opioids and dopamine in alcoholism: human and basic science studies.

We investigated the endogenous opioid system and its role in mediating the reinforcing effects of ethanol that lead to high ethanol consumption as a biochemical marker of an individual's vulnerability to excessive ethanol consumption. We performed studies using human subjects with [high risk (HR)] and without [low risk (LR)] a family history of alcoholism to supplement our studies with experimental animals bred selectively for high- or low-ethanol consumption. HR subjects had lower basal plasma beta-endorphin levels as compared with LR subjects, but they had a more pronounced release of beta-endorphin after exposure to ethanol. Findings from animal studies indicated that ethanol-preferring (C57BL/6) mice (analogous to the HR human subjects) had higher levels of hypothalamic beta-endorphin activity than did ethanol-avoiding (DBA/2) mice (analogous to the LR human subjects) under basal conditions. However, the C57BL/6 mice had a more pronounced release of hypothalamic beta-endorphin than did DBA/2 mice after exposure to ethanol. Thus, although hypothalamic beta-endorphin system activity in human and animal models of alcoholism differs under basal conditions, there is enhanced hypothalamic beta-endorphin system activity after exposure to ethanol in both models. We have also performed studies comparing the density and distribution of opioid receptors in brains of ethanol-preferring animals, such as C57BL/6 mice and ALKO-alcohol (AA) rats, and ethanol-avoiding animals, such as DBA/2 mice and ALKO-non-alcohol (ANA) rats. Interestingly, it was observed that in distinct brain regions known to be important for mediating the process of reinforcement, the C57BL/6 mice had a higher density of delta-opioid receptors than the DBA/2 mice, while the AA rats had a higher density of mu-opioid receptors than the ANA rats. Thus, in the ethanol-preferring animals, the increased release of beta-endorphin following exposure to ethanol was associated with a higher density of delta- or mu-opioid receptors in brain regions important for reinforcement, such as the nucleus accumbens and the ventral tegmental area, and may interact with the dopaminergic system and promote ethanol's reinforcing properties, leading to excessive drinking and alcoholism.

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