酒精中毒的动物模型:啮齿动物高酒精饮酒行为的神经生物学。

W J McBride, T K Li
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引用次数: 589

摘要

这篇综述讨论了为研究慢性饮酒、酒精中毒和异常寻求酒精行为的神经生物学机制而开发啮齿动物模型的努力。选择性育种已经产生了稳定的大鼠系,这些大鼠可靠地表现出高和(为了比较的目的)低的自愿酒精摄入量。此外,研究人员还在啮齿类动物中建立了慢性乙醇自我给药动物模型,以探索环境对乙醇饮用的影响以及身体依赖对酒精自我给药的影响。啮齿类动物没有高度酒精寻求行为的遗传易感性。选择性饲养的高偏好动物通过自由选择饮酒可靠地自我管理乙醇,并对口服乙醇产生药理学上有意义的血液酒精浓度(50 - 200mg %或更高)的量有明显反应。此外,嗜酒大鼠还会通过灌胃的方式给药。在长期自由选择饮酒的情况下,高酒精偏好的大鼠对高剂量乙醇的影响产生了耐受性,并在戒酒后表现出身体依赖的迹象。与不偏好酒精的动物相比,偏好酒精的大鼠对乙醇的镇静催眠作用不那么敏感,对高剂量乙醇的耐受性更快。非选择的普通储备大鼠可以被训练成长期自我管理乙醇,在其最初出现在美味的蔗糖或糖精溶液中,并逐渐用乙醇代替蔗糖或糖精(蔗糖/糖精褪色技术)。此外,以这种方式训练的大鼠,然后通过吸入乙醇蒸气或液体饮食使其依赖,在停药期间增加了乙醇的自我给药。选择性饲养的大鼠和普通饲养的大鼠在2周或更长时间的戒酒后都表现出“复发”和酒精剥夺效应。全身给予(1)增加突触5-羟色胺(5-HT)或多巴胺(DA)水平的药物;(2)激活5-HT1A、5-HT2、D2、D3或GABA(A)受体;(3)阻断阿片样物质和5-HT3受体,在大多数动物模型中减少乙醇摄入量。神经化学、神经解剖学和神经药理学研究表明,高饮酒量和低饮酒量啮齿动物在各种中枢神经系统边缘结构中存在先天差异。此外,在普通饲养大鼠酒精戒断期间,观察到中边缘DA和5-羟色胺功能降低。根据所研究的动物模型,在遗传动物模型中,中边缘多巴胺通路和/或调节该通路的5 -羟色胺、阿片样物质和GABA系统的异常可能是导致异常寻求酒精行为的基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Animal models of alcoholism: neurobiology of high alcohol-drinking behavior in rodents.

This review discusses efforts to develop rodent models for the study of neurobiological mechanisms underlying chronic alcohol drinking, alcoholism, and abnormal alcohol-seeking behavior. Selective breeding has produced stable lines of rats that reliably exhibit high and (for comparison purposes) low voluntary alcohol consumption. In addition, animal models of chronic ethanol self-administration have been developed in rodents, who do not have a genetic predisposition for high alcohol-seeking behavior, to explore environmental influences in ethanol drinking and the effects of physical dependence on alcohol self-administration. The selectively bred high-preference animals reliably self-administer ethanol by free-choice drinking and operantly respond for oral ethanol in amounts that produce pharmacologically meaningful blood alcohol concentrations (50 to 200 mg% and higher). In addition, the alcohol-preferring rats will self-administer ethanol by intragastric infusion. With chronic free-choice drinking, the high alcohol-preferring rats develop tolerance to the high-dose effects of ethanol and show signs of physical dependence after the withdrawal of alcohol. Compared with nonpreferring animals, the alcohol-preferring rats are less sensitive to the sedative-hypnotic effects of ethanol and develop tolerance more quickly to high-dose ethanol. Nonselected common stock rats can be trained to chronically self-administer ethanol following its initial presentation in a palatable sucrose or saccharin solution, and the gradual replacement of the sucrose or saccharin with ethanol (the sucrose/saccharin-fade technique). Moreover, rats that are trained in this manner and then made dependent by ethanol-vapor inhalation or liquid diet increase their ethanol self-administration during the withdrawal period. Both the selectively bred rats and common-stock rats demonstrate "relapse" and an alcohol deprivation effect following 2 or more weeks of abstinence. Systemic administration of agents that (1) increase synaptic levels of serotonin (5-HT) or dopamine (DA); (2) activate 5-HT1A, 5-HT2, D2, D3, or GABA(A) receptors; or (3) block opioid and 5-HT3 receptors decrease ethanol intake in most animal models. Neurochemical, neuroanatomical, and neuropharmacological studies indicate innate differences exist between the high alcohol-consuming and low alcohol-consuming rodents in various CNS limbic structures. In addition, reduced mesolimbic DA and 5-HT function have been observed during alcohol withdrawal in common stock rats. Depending on the animal model under study, abnormalities in the mesolimbic dopamine pathway, and/or the serotonin, opioid, and GABA systems that regulate this pathway may underlie vulnerability to the abnormal alcohol-seeking behavior in the genetic animal models.

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