Literature DB >> 24275014

Social partners prevent alcohol relapse behavior in prairie voles.

Caroline M Hostetler1, Andrey E Ryabinin2.   

Abstract

There is robust evidence for a protective role of interpersonal factors such as social support on alcohol relapse, but research on the mechanisms that social factors may be acting on to effectively protect individuals against relapse is lacking. Prairie voles are highly social, monogamous rodents that freely self-administer ethanol in high amounts, and are a useful model for understanding social influences on alcohol drinking. Here we investigated whether prairie voles can be used to model social influences on relapse using the alcohol deprivation effect, in which animals show a transient increase in ethanol drinking following deprivation. In Experiment I, subjects were housed alone during four weeks of 24-h access to 10% ethanol in a two-bottle choice test. Ethanol was then removed from the cage for 72 h. Animals remained in isolation or were then housed with a familiar same-sex social partner, and ethanol access was resumed. Animals that remained isolated showed an increase in ethanol intake relative to pre-deprivation baseline, indicative of relapse-like behavior. However, animals that were socially housed did not show an increase in ethanol intake, and this was independent of whether the social partner also had access to ethanol. Experiment II replicated the alcohol deprivation effect in a separate cohort of isolated animals. These findings demonstrate that prairie voles display an alcohol deprivation effect and suggest a 'social buffering' effect of relapse-like behavior in the prairie vole. This behavioral paradigm provides a novel approach for investigating the behavioral and neurobiological underpinnings of social influences on alcohol relapse.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alcohol; Alcohol deprivation effect; Ethanol; Prairie vole; Relapse; Social support

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24275014      PMCID: PMC3867132          DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2013.10.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology        ISSN: 0306-4530            Impact factor:   4.905


  16 in total

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  13 in total

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4.  Amphetamine exposure alters behaviors, and neuronal and neurochemical activation in the brain of female prairie voles.

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Review 5.  Animal models of social contact and drug self-administration.

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Review 6.  The neurobiology of pair bond formation, bond disruption, and social buffering.

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7.  Early life sleep disruption is a risk factor for increased ethanol drinking after acute footshock stress in prairie voles.

Authors:  Carolyn E Jones; Peyton Teutsch Wickham; Miranda M Lim
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8.  Stress, social behavior, and resilience: insights from rodents.

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