Alcohol-use disorder (AUD) is the most prevalent substance-use disorder worldwide. There is substantial individual variability in alcohol drinking behaviors in the population, the neural circuit mechanisms of which remain elusive. Utilizing in vivo electrophysiological techniques, we find that low alcohol drinking (LAD) mice have dramatically higher ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine neuron firing and burst activity. Unexpectedly, VTA dopamine neuron activity in high alcohol drinking (HAD) mice does not differ from alcohol naive mice. Optogenetically enhancing VTA dopamine neuron burst activity in HAD mice decreases alcohol drinking behaviors. Circuit-specific recordings reveal that spontaneous activity of nucleus accumbens-projecting VTA (VTA-NAc) neurons is selectively higher in LAD mice. Specifically activating this projection is sufficient to reduce alcohol consumption in HAD mice. Furthermore, we uncover ionic and cellular mechanisms that suggest unique neuroadaptations between the alcohol drinking groups. Together, these data identify a neural circuit responsible for individual alcohol drinking behaviors. Mice exposed to a two-bottle alcohol choice paradigm can be divided into high and low drinking groups. Here, the authors show that stimulating VTA neurons to induce higher phasic activity patterns that are observed in low alcohol drinking mice, suppresses alcohol drinking in mice that are high alcohol drinking.
Midbrain circuit regulation of individual alcohol drinking behaviors in mice
B. Juarez,Carole Morel,Stacy M. Ku,Yutong Liu,Hongxing Zhang,Sarah E. Montgomery,Hilledna Gregoire,Efrain A. Ribeiro,Marshall Crumiller,Ciorana Roman-Ortiz,J. Walsh,Kelcy Jackson,Denise E Croote,Yingbo Zhu,Song Zhang,L. Vendruscolo,Scott Edwards,A. Roberts,G. Hodes,Yongke Lu,E. Calipari,D. Chaudhury,Allyson K. Friedman,Ming-Hu Han
Published 2017 in Nature Communications
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- Publication year
2017
- Venue
Nature Communications
- Publication date
2017-12-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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