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Hope For Alcoholism Cure As Researchers Discover Brain Circuit That Controls Compulsive Drinking

Hope For Alcoholism Cure As Researchers Discover Brain Circuit That Controls Compulsive Drinking

A brain circuit that controls the compulsive drinking of alcohol has been discovered in mice, offering a hope of one day finding a cure for alcoholism in humans.

Scientists have long sought to understand why some people are prone to develop drinking problems while others are not. The team’s discovery in mice, if translated to humans, may provide doctors a way to reveal whether someone is likely to become compulsive drinking later in life.

Alcoholism is a chronic brain disease in which individual drinks compulsively — often accompanied by negative emotions.

Whereas previous studies have focused on examining the brain after a drinking disorder develops, the researchers from the Salk Institute in California set out to prove that brain circuits can make some people more likely to be alcoholics. The lead researcher and neuroscientist Kay Tye says:

“We’ve found for the first time a brain circuit that can accurately predict which mice will develop compulsive drinking — weeks before the behaviour starts.

“This research bridges the gap between circuit analysis and alcohol/addiction research, and provides a first glimpse at how representations of compulsive drinking develop across time in the brain.”

A paper author and pharmacologist Cody Siciliano of the Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, added:

“We initially sought to understand how the brain is altered by binge drinking to drive compulsive alcohol consumption.

“In the process, we stumbled across a surprising finding where we were actually able to predict which animals would become compulsive based on neutral activity during the very first time they drank.”

The full findings of the study were published in the journal Science. The researchers created a test — known as a ‘binge-induced compulsion task’ — to examine how susceptibility towards alcohol consumption interacts with experience to produce compulsive drinking in mice.

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They observed that mice could be sorted into three groups, that low drinkers, high drinkers, and compulsive drinkers.

Unlike the first two groups, the compulsive drinkers showed insensitivity to negative consequences.

The scientists then used a special imaging technique to chart the nature of the cells and brain regions of interest before, during and after drinking.

They looked specifically at neuron activity in two regions of the brain involved in behavioural control and responding to adverse events — the medial prefrontal cortex and the periaqueductal grey matter, respectively.

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They found that the development of compulsive alcohol drinking was related to communication patterns between these two brain regions — and that such can serve as a biomarker for predicting compulsive drinking in the future.

The researchers also used a technique dubbed ‘optogenetics’ to manipulate the activity of the neural pathway using light.

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By turning the brain circuit on or off, the scientists were able to either increase compulsive drinking tendencies or reduce it. Professor Tye added:

“Now, we can look into the brain and find activity patterns that predict if mice will become compulsive drinkers in the future before the compulsion develops.

“We do not know if this brain circuit is specific to alcohol or if the same circuit is involved in multiple different compulsive behaviours.”

These, she explained, might include “those related to other substances of abuse or natural rewards, so that is something we need to investigate.”

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