INVESTIGADORES
PAUTASSI Ricardo Marcos
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Sigma-1 antagonism inhibits binge ethanol drinking at Adolescence
Autor/es:
SALGUERO, AGUSTÍN; LEYVA, LEANDRO RUIZ; MORON I; PORTILLO-SALIDO, ENRIQUE; CENDÁN, CRUZ MIGUEL; GARCÍA VIRGOLINI, RODRIGO; PAUTASSI R.M.
Lugar:
Virtual
Reunión:
Congreso; XXXV Congreso Anual (Virtual) de la Sociedad Argentina de Neurociencias; 2020
Institución organizadora:
Sociedad Argentina de Neurociencias
Resumen:
Background: ethanol use during adolescence is a significant health problem, yet the pharmacological treatments to reduce adolescent binge drinking are scarce. The present study assessed, in male and female adolescent Wistar rats, if the sigma-1 receptor (S1-R) antagonists S1RA or BD-1063 disrupted ethanol drinking. Methods: Three times a week, for two weeks, the rats received the S1-R antagonists. Thirty min later they were exposed, for 2 h, to a bottle of 8% or 10 % v/v ethanol. A 24 h, two-bottle, ethanol intake test was conducted after termination of these procedures. Results: The rats given 64 mg/kg S1RA drank, in each binge session, significantly less than vehicle counterparts. Male rats given 4 or 16 mg/kg S1RA drank significantly less than those given 0 mg/kg in session 3 or in session 1 and 2, respectively; whereas female rats given 4 or 16 mg/kg drank significantly less than females given 0 mg/kg in session 2?5 or in sessions 2?6, respectively. Administration of 32 mg/kg, but not of 2 or 8 mg/kg, BD-1063 suppressed, across sessions, ethanol drinking. S1-R antagonism reduced absolute ethanol drinking at the two-bottle choice post-test. Conclusions: the results indicate that S1-R antagonists may be promising targets to prevent increases in ethanol intake at adolescence. The persistent effect of S1-R antagonism in free-choice drinking suggests that modulation of the S1-R is altering plastic effects associated with ethanol exposure.