Sensitization to ethanol’s stimulant effect is associated with region-specific increases in brain D2 receptor binding (original) (raw)
Abstract
Rationale: Stimulation of locomotor activity by low doses of ethanol (EtOH) and the potentiation of this response after repeated administration (sensitization) have been related to EtOH’s rewarding and addictive properties and to altered dopaminergic activity in brain. In mice, behavioral sensitization to EtOH occurs only in a subset of treated animals, and this provides an opportunity for distinguishing general drug effects from sensitization-specific brain effects. Objectives: In view of evidence suggesting a role for dopamine D2 receptors in EtOH preference and abuse liability, the present study addressed the hypothesis that D2 binding would be altered in specific brain regions in mice showing differential sensitization responses to chronic EtOH administration. Methods: Male albino Swiss mice received 2.4 g/kg EtOH i.p. daily for 21 days and were then separated into sensitized or non-sensitized subgroups on the basis of weekly locomotor activity tests. Results: Autoradiographic analyses of [3H]raclopride binding to D2 sites revealed significant increases in the anterior caudate-putamen of mice in the EtOH-sensitized group when compared with either saline controls (+40%, P<0.00009) or to mice in the EtOH non-sensitized group (+32%; P<0.0003). Smaller increases were seen in the ventrolateral caudate-putamen of sensitized animals (+18% vs control, P<0.02; and 12% vs non-sensitized mice, P<0.07). No differences were found in other brain regions, including the nucleus accumbens, olfactory bulb and substantia nigra. Conclusions: The observed increases in D2-receptor binding in circumscribed targets of nigrostriatal projections may reflect either a pre-existing condition in sensitization-prone animals or a selective vulnerability of D2 receptors to chronic EtOH in these animals. In either case, it may be a marker for differential susceptibility to EtOH sensitization.
Access this article
Subscribe and save
- Starting from 10 chapters or articles per month
- Access and download chapters and articles from more than 300k books and 2,500 journals
- Cancel anytime View plans
Buy Now
Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.
Instant access to the full article PDF.
Similar content being viewed by others
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
- Department of Psychobiology, Federal University of São Paulo, Rua Botucatu 862, 1 andar, São Paulo 04023-062, SP, Brazil e-mail: mlformig@psicobio.epm.br, Tel.: +55-11-5390155, Fax: +55-11-5725092, , , , , , BR
M. L. O. Souza-Formigoni, Eliane M. De Lucca, Débora C. Hipólide, Sylvia C. Enns & Maria Gabriela M. Oliveira - Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Clarke Institute Division, 250 College Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5T 1R8, , , , , , CA
José N. Nobrega
Authors
- M. L. O. Souza-Formigoni
- Eliane M. De Lucca
- Débora C. Hipólide
- Sylvia C. Enns
- Maria Gabriela M. Oliveira
- José N. Nobrega
Additional information
Received: 9 December 1998 / Final version: 14 May 1999
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Souza-Formigoni, M., De Lucca, E., Hipólide, D. et al. Sensitization to ethanol’s stimulant effect is associated with region-specific increases in brain D2 receptor binding.Psychopharmacology 146, 262–267 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002130051115
- Issue date: October 1999
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002130051115