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  • Anxiolytic effects of ethanol are partially related to a reduced expression of adenylyl cyclase 5 but not to μ-opioid receptor activation in rat nucleus accumbens.

Anxiolytic effects of ethanol are partially related to a reduced expression of adenylyl cyclase 5 but not to μ-opioid receptor activation in rat nucleus accumbens.

Behavioural brain research (2012-09-12)
M Morales-Mulia, E Estrada-Camarena, M I Amaya, S Mejía-Mauríes, I Sollozo-Dupont, G Mengod, P de Gortari
ABSTRACT

Anxiolytic effects of alcohol participate in the reinforcing properties of the drug, in which nucleus accumbens (NAcc) is implicated. The opioidergic system in NAcc is considered a main pathway involved in the emotional responses of animals: rats microinjected with morphine in NAcc and the systemic administration of μ-opioid receptors (MOR) agonists yield low anxiety scores in the elevated plus maze (EPM), a behavioral test of anxiety. However, the specific participation of NAcc MOR in the anxiolytic effect of ethanol has not been studied. AC5, a cAMP-synthezising adenylyl-cyclase, is highly expressed in NAcc; it is negatively coupled to MOR and has been implicated in anxiety levels of animals. We evaluated the anxiolytic effects of an intra-gastric administration of ethanol (2.5 g/kg) in animals subjected to EPM at 1, 4, and 8 h after drug or water exposure. Locomotion was assayed with the open-field test; we also measured accumbal AC5 and MOR mRNA levels by RT-PCR. After 1 h, ethanol-exposed animals showed anxiolytic-like behavior, as well as decreased and increased AC5 and MOR expression in NAcc, respectively. Intra-accumbal injection of β-funaltrexamine (FNA), a MOR antagonist, did not block ethanol-induced anxiolysis, rather it induced a tendency to increase anxiety levels in the water-exposed group. FNA partially decreased accumbal AC5 expression in ethanol-treated rats. We concluded that AC5 in NAcc is participating in the emotional effects of ethanol; that MOR was not mediating the drug-induced AC5 reduction in NAcc nor the ethanol-induced anxiolysis. MOR only might be involved in basal levels of anxiety of animals.