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The role of corticostriatal pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) in excessive alcohol drinking

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic, relapsing condition with a complex etiology and heritable susceptibility factors interact with environmental factors to produce and maintain the disease. One goal of current neuroscience research is to identify the neuroadaptations mediating the propensity to consume high amounts of alcohol, of either innate or environmental origin. Dysfunctional neuronal communication between prefrontal cortical regions and the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) have been implicated in excessive alcohol drinking and proposed to play a critical role in AUD. However, the exact mechanism by which altered prefrontostriatal transmission may perpetuate excessive drinking is poorly understood. In addition, the exact role of dopamine receptor 1 (D1R) or dopamine receptor 2 (D2R)-expressing medium spiny neurons in the NAcc is unclear and adds another layer of complexity to this framework. This thesis concerns pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a highly conserved 38 amino acid neuropeptide, and its receptor PAC1R. Studies in rodents and humans have implicated PACAP and PAC1R in the actions of drugs of abuse, including more recently, alcohol. Notably, the PACAP/PAC1R system has also been shown to increase glutamatergic neurotransmission in several circuits. The overall hypothesis of this project was that the PACAP/PAC1 system in the prefrontal cortex-NAcc pathway regulates excessive drinking and the long-lasting neuroplastic changes observed in alcohol addiction, via the modulation of the glutamatergic system. Using alcohol-preferring rats, a hereditary model of AUD, we found that intracerebroventricular administration of a PAC1R antagonist blocked excessive alcohol drinking, motivation to drink, and alcohol seeking behavior selectively in this line and not in outbred rats. Alcohol-preferring rats displayed a higher number of PAC1R positive cells in the NAcc Core. Blockade of PAC1R in the NAcc Core, via pharmacology or gene knockdown, resulted in reduced alcohol drinking. Conversely, we found that knockdown of the PAC1R in the NAcc Shell led to increased alcohol drinking and motivation to drink in alcohol-preferring rats, suggesting that the PACAP/PAC1R system may play an opposite role in these two NAcc subregions. Using a mouse exposure model of excessive drinking, a glutamatergic projection from PACAP-expressing cells in the prelimbic portion of the prefrontal cortex (PrL) to the NAcc Core circuit was found to be recruited by alcohol exposure. Inhibition of these neurons, as well as PACAP neuron ablation or PACAP deletion, led to decreased alcohol intake that was specific to male mice. Systemic PAC1R antagonism, and specific knockdown of PAC1R in the NAcc Core, also decreased alcohol intake in male mice. Using slice electrophysiology and channelrhodopsin assisted circuit mapping, we found that this pathway is biased to D1R-expressing neurons in the NAcc Core following alcohol exposure in males, and that PACAP application increases post-synaptic measures of glutamatergic transmission in this circuit. Overall, these data describe a key role for the corticostriatal PACAP/PAC1R system in aberrant alcohol drinking in both hereditary- and exposure-based models of AUD and give novel insights into the underlying mechanisms of alcohol addiction. / 2025-01-23T00:00:00Z

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/45506
Date23 January 2023
CreatorsMinnig, Margaret
ContributorsSabino, Valentina
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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