| Literature DB >> 24958205 |
Jörgen A Engel1, Elisabet Jerlhag.
Abstract
Food intake and appetite are regulated by various circulating hormones including ghrelin and glucagon-like-peptide 1 (GLP-1). Ghrelin, mainly released from the stomach, increases food intake, induces appetite, enhances adiposity as well as releases growth hormone. Hypothalamic "ghrelin receptors" (GHS-R1A) have a critical role in food intake regulation, but GHS-R1A are also expressed in reward related areas. GLP-1 is produced in the intestinal mucosa as well as in the hindbrain in response to nutrient ingestion. This gut-brain hormone reduces food intake as well as regulates glucose homeostasis, foremost via GLP-1 receptors in hypothalamus and brain stem. However, GLP-1 receptors are expressed in areas intimately associated with reward regulation. Given that regulation of food and drug intake share common neurobiological substrates, the possibility that ghrelin and GLP-1 play an important role in reward regulation should be considered. Indeed, this leading article describes that the orexigenic peptide ghrelin activates the cholinergic-dopaminergic reward link, an important part of the reward systems in the brain associated with reinforcement and thereby increases the incentive salience for motivated behaviors via this system. We also review the role of ghrelin signaling for reward induced by alcohol and addictive drugs from a preclinical, clinical and human genetic perspective. In addition, the recent findings showing that GLP-1 controls reward induced by alcohol, amphetamine, cocaine and nicotine in rodents are overviewed herein. Finally, the role of several other appetite regulatory hormones for reward and addiction is briefly discussed. Collectively, these data suggest that ghrelin and GLP-1 receptors may be novel targets for development of pharmacological treatments of alcohol and drug dependence.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24958205 PMCID: PMC4181507 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-014-0178-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Summary of articles addressing the role of ghrelin and GLP-1 signaling in alcohol and drug addiction
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| → Activates the mesolimbic dopamine system, specifically the cholinergic–dopaminergic reward link, in rodents | Jerlhag et al. [ |
| Abizaid et al. [ | ||
| Jerlhag et al. [ | ||
| Jerlhag [ | ||
| Jerlhag et al. [ | ||
| Quarta et al. [ | ||
| Jerlhag et al. [ | ||
| Jerlhag et al. [ | ||
| → Causes a focal activation of a network including ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens and lateral hypothalamus in rats | Wellman et al. [ | |
| → Increases novelty seeking in rats | Hansson et al. [ | |
| → Increases alcohol intake in mice when administered into the third ventricle, ventral tegmental area or laterodorsal tegmental area | Jerlhag et al. [ | |
| → Slightly increases alcohol intake in alcohol naïve rats when administered peripherally | Lyons et al. [ | |
| → Augments cocaine-induced hyperlocomotion and conditioned place preference in rats | Wellman et al. [ | |
| Davis et al. [ | ||
| → Increases the response in reward-related areas, such as nucleus accumbens, to food in humans | Malik et al. [ | |
| → Increases alcohol craving in alcohol dependent heavy-drinking individuals when injected intravenously | Leggio et al. [ | |
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| → Display attenuation of alcohol-induced reward as measured by locomotor stimulation, conditioned place preference and accumbal dopamine release | Jerlhag et al. [ |
| Bahi et al. [ | ||
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| → Does not alter the rewarding properties of alcohol or alcohol intake in rodents | Jerlhag et al. [ |
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| → Are not different in high- and low-alcohol preferring rats | Landgren et al. [ |
| → Are lower in high-alcohol preferring rats than in low-alcohol preferring rats | Szulc et al. [ | |
| → Are reduced by acute oral alcohol consumption in healthy volunteers | Calissendorff et al. [ | |
| Calissendorff et al. [ | ||
| Zimmerman et al. [ | ||
| → Which are increased by fasting are suppressed by acute intravenous administration of alcohol in healthy nonsmoking social drinkers | Leggio et al. [ | |
| → Are suppressed in active drinking in alcohol-dependent individuals | Addolorato et al. [ | |
| Kraus et al. [ | ||
| Badaoui et al. [ | ||
| → Are increased in abstinent alcoholics | Kim et al. [ | |
| Kraus et al. [ | ||
| Wurst et al. [ | ||
| → Are higher in alcohol dependent individuals with high craving scores than in those with low craving scores | Addolorato et al. [ | |
| Wurst et al. [ | ||
| Koopmann et al. [ | ||
| Leggio et al. [ | ||
| → Are increased in rats with high reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior | Tessari et al. [ | |
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| → Are associated with high alcohol intake, personality traits important for alcohol dependence as well as with type II alcoholism | Landgren et al. [ |
| Landgren et al. [ | ||
| Landgren et al. [ | ||
| → Are associated with smoking as well as with amphetamine dependence in humans | Landgren et al. [ | |
| Suchankova et al. [ | ||
| → Are associated with high sucrose intake | Landgren et al. [ | |
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| → Blocks the rewarding properties of alcohol in mice when administered centrally or peripherally | Jerlhag et al. [ |
| → Decreases alcohol intake in rodents | Jerlhag et al. [ | |
| Kaur and Ryabinin [ | ||
| Landgren et al. [ | ||
| Bahi et al. [ | ||
| Suchankova et al. [ | ||
| → Decreases the motivation to consume alcohol as well as prevents relapse to alcohol drinking in rats | Landgren et al. [ | |
| → Blocks the rewarding properties of amphetamine, cocaine or nicotine in rodents | Jerlhag et al. [ | |
| Abizaid et al. [ | ||
| Clifford et al. [ | ||
| Wellman et al. [ | ||
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| → Display attenuation of the rewarding properties of alcohol as measured by locomotor stimulation, accumbal dopamine release as well as conditioned place preference | Jerlhag et al. [ |
| → Display a reduction in cocaine-induced locomotor stimulation and sensitization | Clifford et al. [ | |
| Abizaid et al. [ | ||
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| → Is detected in the nucleus accumbens, amygdala as well as on dopaminergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area and on cholinergic neurons in the laterodorsal tegmental area in rats | Abizaid et al. [ |
| Dickson et al. [ | ||
| Landgren et al. [ | ||
| Cruz et al. [ | ||
| → Is altered in the ventral tegmental area following voluntary oral alcohol intake (3 or 10 months) | Landgren et al. [ | |
| Suchankova et al. [ | ||
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| → Decrease alcohol intake, alcohol seeking behavior and alcohol-induced reward in rodents | Egecioglu et al. [ |
| Shirazi et al. [ | ||
| → Attenuate the rewarding properties of amphetamine and cocaine in rodents | Erreger et al. [ | |
| Graham et al. [ | ||
| Egecioglu et al. [ | ||
| → Prevent nicotine reward as well as block nicotine-induced expression of locomotor sensitization in mice | Egecioglu et al. [ |
| The data presented in this leading article collectively show that the orexigenic peptide ghrelin actives the cholinergic–dopaminergic reward link, an important part of the reward systems in the brain, implying that ghrelin may increase the incentive salience of motivated behaviors. |
| Central ghrelin signaling, as shown by ghrelin administration, ghrelin knockout mice as well as by pharmacological or genetical suppression of the ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1A), is required for alcohol mediated behaviors as well as for drug-induced reward in rodents, which is verified in human genetics studies. |
| In addition to regulation of food intake and glucose homeostasis, recent and novel data show that glucagon-like-peptide 1, another endocrine signal from the gut, mediates reward induced by alcohol, amphetamine, cocaine and nicotine in rodents. |
| In conclusion, peptides regulating appetite, such as ghrelin and GLP-1, may therefore constitute novel targets for development of pharmacological treatment strategies for addictive behaviors such as alcohol use disorders. |