Prostaglandin-Mediated Reinstatement of Drug Taking After Alcohol Drinking by Female Adolescent Rats

Date
2022-04
Language
American English
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Ph.D.
Degree Year
2022
Department
Medical Neuroscience
Grantor
Indiana University
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Abstract

Adolescent alcohol abuse is a global problem that initiates lifelong addiction. Alcohol use during adolescence is associated with subsequent Meth dependence in humans. Specifically, female adolescents are particularly vulnerable to serial alcohol and Meth use. However, it is unknown if prior voluntary alcohol drinking impacts subsequent Meth-taking in female adolescent rats. Both alcohol and Meth increase the prostaglandin synthesis enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in the brain but the effect of serial exposure to alcohol and Meth on COX-2 has not been determined. The first study uses a novel method of serial voluntary alcohol drinking and Meth self-administration in female adolescent rats to model human patterns of co-abuse. Prior alcohol drinking did not affect subsequent Meth self-administration, but it reduced the cue-primed reinstatement of Methseeking after abstinence from Meth. Rats with a history of adolescent alcohol drinking also had increased COX-2 in the dorsal striatum, regardless of subsequent Meth selfadministration. These findings demonstrate that a history of adolescent alcohol drinking does not alter Meth self-administration but persistently reduces cue-primed Meth seeking and increases COX-2 after prolonged abstinence from alcohol. To further examine the role of COX-2 in alcohol drinking, the second study found that adolescent alcohol drinking not only increased COX-2 after four weeks of alcohol abstinence, but also increased endothelin-1 (ET-1) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in the dorsal striatum. Furthermore, adolescent alcohol drinking increased alcohol drinking after abstinence, and this increase was attenuated by treatment with the COX-2 inhibitor nimesulide during abstinence. Antagonism of the interaction between PGE2 and its receptor 1 (EP1) also attenuated the increase in relapse drinking and restored alcohol drinking to the rate of alcohol naïve rats. Overall, these experiments identified a prostaglandin-mediated mechanism that is a putative target for the treatment of alcohol relapse following abstinence in individuals with a history of adolescent alcohol abuse.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
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