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Voluntary alcohol intake alters the motivation to seek intravenous oxycodone and neuronal activation during the reinstatement of oxycodone and sucrose seeking.

Courtney S WilkinsonHarrison L BlountShane DavisGiselle RojasLizhen WuNiall P MurphyMarek SchwendtLori A Knackstedt
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Opioid-alcohol polysubstance use is prevalent and worsens treatment outcomes. Here we assessed whether co-consumption of oxycodone and alcohol would influence intake of one another, demand for oxycodone, and the neurocircuitry underlying cue-primed reinstatement of oxycodone-seeking. Male and female rats underwent oxycodone intravenous self-administration (IVSA) with access to either alcohol (20% v/v) and water or only water immediately after the IVSA session. Next, economic demand for intravenous oxycodone was assessed while access to alcohol and/or water continued. Control rats self-administered sucrose followed by access to alcohol and/or water. Rats underwent extinction training and brains were processed for c-fos mRNA expression immediately following a cue-primed reinstatement test. While both sexes decreased oxycodone intake if they had access to alcohol, and decreased alcohol intake if they had access to oxycodone, female oxycodone+alcohol rats exhibited decreased demand elasticity for intravenous oxycodone and increased cue-primed reinstatement while male rats did not. Spontaneous withdrawal signs were correlated with oxycodone intake while alcohol intake was correlated with anxiety-like behavior. Alcohol consumption increased the number of basolateral and central amygdala neurons activated during sucrose and oxycodone reinstatement and the number of ventral and dorsal striatum neurons engaged by sucrose reinstatement. Nucleus accumbens shell dopamine 1 receptor containing neurons displayed activation patterns consistent with oxycodone reinstatement. Thus, alcohol alters the motivation to seek oxycodone in a sex-dependent manner and alters the neural circuitry engaged by cue-primed reinstatement of sucrose and oxycodone-seeking.
Keyphrases
  • alcohol consumption
  • spinal cord
  • high dose
  • mental health
  • body mass index
  • low dose
  • depressive symptoms
  • prefrontal cortex
  • pain management
  • functional connectivity
  • sleep quality
  • stress induced