A common molecular mechanism for cognitive deficits and craving in alcoholism

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Date
2020
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English
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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Abstract

Alcohol-dependent patients commonly show impairments in executive functions that facilitate craving and can lead to relapse. The medial prefrontal cortex, a key brain region for executive control, is prone to alcohol-induced neuroadaptations. However, the molecular mechanisms leading to executive dysfunction in alcoholism are poorly understood. Here using a bi-directional neuromodulation approach we demonstrate a causal link for reduced prefrontal mGluR2 function and both impaired executive control and alcohol craving. By neuron-specific prefrontal knockdown of mGluR2 in rats, we generated a phenotype of reduced cognitive flexibility and excessive alcohol-seeking. Conversely, restoring prefrontal mGluR2 levels in alcohol-dependent rats rescued these pathological behaviors. Also targeting mGluR2 pharmacologically reduced relapse behavior. Finally, we developed a FDG-PET biomarker to identify those individuals that respond to mGluR2-based interventions. In conclusion, we identified a common molecular pathological mechanism for both executive dysfunction and alcohol craving, and provide a personalized mGluR2-mechanism-based intervention strategy for medication development of alcoholism.

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Meinhardt, M. W., Pfarr, S., Rohleder, C., Vengeliene, V., Barroso-Flores, J., Hoffmann, R., ... & Sommer, W. H. (2020). A common molecular mechanism for cognitive deficits and craving in alcoholism. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.07.13.200519
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bioRxiv
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