Synchrony between midbrain gene transcription and dopamine terminal regulation is modulated by chronic alcohol drinking.
Zahra Z FarahbakhshKatherine M HolleranJonathon P SensSteve C FordahlMadelyn I MautererAlberto J LópezVerginia C Cuzon CarlsonDrew D KiralyKathleen A GrantSara R JonesCody A SicilianoPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Alcohol use disorder is marked by disrupted behavioral and emotional states which persist into abstinence. The enduring synaptic alterations that remain despite the absence of alcohol are of interest for interventions to prevent relapse. Here, 28 male rhesus macaques underwent over 20 months of alcohol drinking interspersed with three 30-day forced abstinence periods. After the last abstinence period, we paired direct sub-second dopamine monitoring via ex vivo voltammetry in nucleus accumbens slices with RNA-sequencing of the ventral tegmental area. We found persistent augmentation of dopamine transporter function, kappa opioid receptor sensitivity, and dynorphin release - all inhibitory regulators which act to decrease extracellular dopamine. Surprisingly, though transcript expression was not altered, the relationship between gene expression and functional readouts of these encoded proteins was highly dynamic and altered by drinking history. These results outline the long-lasting synaptic impact of alcohol use and suggest that assessment of transcript-function relationships is critical for the rational design of precision therapeutics.
Keyphrases
- alcohol consumption
- prefrontal cortex
- uric acid
- gene expression
- smoking cessation
- alcohol use disorder
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- single cell
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- nuclear factor
- chronic pain
- spinal cord
- physical activity
- small molecule
- binding protein
- copy number
- deep brain stimulation
- soft tissue
- spinal cord injury