Blockade of alcohol excessive and “relapse” drinking in male mice by pharmacological cryptochrome (CRY) activation

Rationale Metabolic dysfunction, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse disorders are associated with disruptions in circadian rhythm and circadian clock gene machinery. While the effects of alcohol on several core components of the clock genes have been described in rodent models, p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychopharmacology 2021-04, Vol.238 (4), p.1099-1109
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Yan, Kreek, Mary Jeanne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rationale Metabolic dysfunction, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse disorders are associated with disruptions in circadian rhythm and circadian clock gene machinery. While the effects of alcohol on several core components of the clock genes have been described in rodent models, pharmacological activation or inhibition of clock gene functions has not been studied on alcohol drinking behaviors. Objectives We investigated whether cryptochrome (CRY1/2) activator KL001 altered alcohol intake in mice in excessive and relapse-like alcohol drinking models. Methods Mice, subjected to 3 weeks of chronic intermittent alcohol drinking (IAD) (two-bottle choice, 24-h access every other day) developed excessive alcohol intake and high preference. We evaluated the pharmacological effects of KL001 after either 1-day acute withdrawal from IAD or 1-week chronic withdrawal using the alcohol deprivation effect (ADE) model. Results Single pretreatment with KL001 at 1–4 mg kg −1 reduced alcohol intake and preference after acute withdrawal in a dose-related manner. The effect of KL001 on reducing excessive alcohol consumption seems alcohol specific, as the compound does not alter sucrose (caloric reinforcer) or saccharin (noncaloric reinforcer) consumption in mice. Both single- and multiple-dosing regimens with an effective dose of KL001 (4 mg kg −1 ) prevented the ADE after chronic withdrawal, with no tolerance development after the multi-dosing regimen. Conclusions Pretreatment with KL001 (a CRY1/2 activator) reduces excessive and “relapse” alcohol drinking in mice. Our in vivo results with a CRY activator suggest a possible novel target for alcohol treatment intervention.
ISSN:0033-3158
1432-2072
DOI:10.1007/s00213-020-05757-9