The CRF1 receptor mediates social behavior deficits induced by opiate withdrawal.
Alessandro PiccinAngelo ContarinoPublished in: Journal of neuroscience research (2020)
Poor sociability and aggressive behavior are key clinical features of opioid use disorders. The corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) system may mediate behavioral effects of substances of abuse but its implication in substance-induced social behavior deficits and outward-directed hostility remains largely unknown. CRF signaling is mediated by two receptor types, termed CRF1 and CRF2 . The present study aimed at understanding the role for the CRF1 receptor in social and aggressive behavior induced by withdrawal from repeated opiate administration. Thus, wild-type (CRF1 +/+), CRF1 receptor heterozygous (CRF1 +/-), and null mutant (CRF1 -/-) female and male mice were treated with saline or escalating doses of morphine (20-100 mg/kg, i.p.) during six consecutive days and tested in the three-chamber task for sociability (i.e., preference for an unfamiliar same-sex conspecific vs. an object) 7 days after the last administration. Moreover, aggressive biting behavior toward the unfamiliar conspecific was assessed during the three-chamber test. Opiate withdrawal disrupted sociability in CRF1 +/+ and CRF1 +/-, but not in CRF1 -/-, female mice, without affecting aggressive biting behavior in any genotype. In contrast, opiate withdrawal did not affect sociability but increased aggressive biting behavior in male mice, independently of CRF1 receptor-deficiency. Nevertheless, in opiate-withdrawn CRF1 +/+, but not CRF1 +/- and CRF1 -/-, male mice, sociability directly correlated with aggressive biting behavior, suggesting a role for the CRF1 receptor in hostility-linked social approach. These findings demonstrate the implication of the CRF1 receptor in social behavior deficits associated with repeated opiate administration and withdrawal, revealing a new potential target for the treatment of opioid use disorders.