Different lines of rats selectively-bred for high alcohol-drinking demonstrate disparate preferences for nicotine self-administration

Joint Authors

Morrison, Margaret E.
Levin, Edward D.
Wells, Corinne
Rezvani, Amir H.
Slade, Susan
Marshall, Lindsey
Morris, Matt
Confino, Jamie
Allenby, Cheyenne
Lumeng, Lawrence

Source

Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research

Issue

Vol. 5, Issue 2016 (31 Dec. 2016), pp.1-9, 9 p.

Publisher

Ashdin Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2016-12-31

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

9

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Background.

Alcohol and nicotine are commonly coabused.

The search for a common core of neural, behavioral, and genetic factors underlying addiction has been the goal of addiction research.

Purpose.

Genetic predisposition to high alcohol intake has been studied in rats by selectively breeding rats that have high preference for alcohol.

The current experiments were conducted to determine if the level of intravenous nicotine administration for the various lines of alcohol-preferring rats differs from that for nonalcohol-preferring controls.

Study design.

Adult alcohol-na¨ıve selectively-bred alcohol-preferring male rats from four lines (P, AA, HAD-1, sP) and their control nonalcohol-preferring rats (NP, ANA, LAD-1, sNP) were trained and given access to self-administer nicotine (0.03mg/kg/infusion).

Results.

The results show that the P rats selfadministered significantly more nicotine than NP rats.

In contrast, there were no significant differences in nicotine self-administration between the sP and sNP or the AA and ANA rats.

Unexpectedly, high alcohol-drinking HAD-1 rats self-administered significantly less nicotine than low alcohol-drinking LAD-1 rats.

Conclusion.

This suggests that some genetic factors that underlie high-alcohol intake have more general effects in promoting high nicotine intake tendencies, while other genetic factors are more specific to only heavy drinking

American Psychological Association (APA)

Rezvani, Amir H.& Levin, Edward D.& Wells, Corinne& Slade, Susan& Morrison, Margaret E.& Marshall, Lindsey…[et al.]. 2016. Different lines of rats selectively-bred for high alcohol-drinking demonstrate disparate preferences for nicotine self-administration. Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research،Vol. 5, no. 2016, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-679453

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Rezvani, Amir H.…[et al.]. Different lines of rats selectively-bred for high alcohol-drinking demonstrate disparate preferences for nicotine self-administration. Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research Vol. 5 (2016), pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-679453

American Medical Association (AMA)

Rezvani, Amir H.& Levin, Edward D.& Wells, Corinne& Slade, Susan& Morrison, Margaret E.& Marshall, Lindsey…[et al.]. Different lines of rats selectively-bred for high alcohol-drinking demonstrate disparate preferences for nicotine self-administration. Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research. 2016. Vol. 5, no. 2016, pp.1-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-679453

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 7-9

Record ID

BIM-679453