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A dual treatment blocks alcohol binge-drinking relapse: Microbiota as a new player

Fernando Ezquer, Marı́a Elena Quintanilla, Paola Morales, Daniela Santapau, José M. Munita, Francisco Moya‐Flores, Marcelo Ezquer, Mario Herrera‐Marschitz, Yedy Israel

2022Drug and Alcohol Dependence26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

RATIONALE: Gut microbiota communicates information to the brain. Some animals are born with a gut microbiota that predisposes to high alcohol consumption, and transplantation of fecal material from alcoholics to mice increases animal preference for ethanol. Alcohol-use-disorders are chronic conditions where relapse is the hallmark. A predictive animal model of relapse is the "alcohol deprivation effect" where ethanol re-access is allowed following chronic alcohol intake and a long alcohol deprivation. The present study evaluates the effect of gut microbiota modification on relapse, as an adjunct to N-acetylcysteine + Acetylsalicylic acid administration, which inhibits the alcohol-induced hyper-glutamatergic condition. METHODS: Rats bred as heavy alcohol consumers (UChB) were allowed ethanol intake for one month, were deprived of alcohol for two-weeks and subsequently offered re-access to ethanol. Prior to ethanol re-access animals received orally either (i) vehicle-control, (ii) Lactobacillus-rhamnosus-GG after antibiotic treatment (LGG); (iii) N-acetylcysteine+Acetylsalicylic acid (NAC/ASA) or (iv) both treatments: LGG+ (NAC/ASA). RESULTS: Marked binge drinking (1.75 g ethanol/kg in 60 min) and blood alcohol levels exceeding 80 mg/dl were observed in the control group upon ethanol-re-access. Lactobacillus-GG or (NAC+ASA) treatments inhibited alcohol intake by 66-80%. The combination of both treatments virtually suppressed (inhibition of 90%) the re-access binge-like drinking, showing additive effects. Treatment with NAC+ASA increased the levels of glutamate transporters xCT and GLT-1 in nucleus accumbens, while Lactobacillus-GG administration increased those of the dopamine transporter (DAT). CONCLUSIONS: The administration of a well-accepted probiotic may be of value as an adjunct in the treatment of alcohol-use-disorders.

Topics & Concepts

AlcoholEthanolBinge drinkingNucleus accumbensEthanol metabolismMedicineLactobacillus rhamnosusAlcohol use disorderPharmacologyGut floraInternal medicineChemistryLactobacillusFood scienceBiochemistryAlcohol consumptionDopamineImmunologyFermentationAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on BehaviorGut microbiota and health
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