| Literature DB >> 29765841 |
Arnauld Belmer1,2, Omkar L Patkar1,2, Kim M Pitman1,2, Selena E Bartlett1,2.
Abstract
Alcohol addiction is a debilitating disorder producing maladaptive changes in the brain, leading drinkers to become more sensitive to stress and anxiety. These changes are key factors contributing to alcohol craving and maintaining a persistent vulnerability to relapse. Serotonin (5-Hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) is a monoamine neurotransmitter widely expressed in the central nervous system where it plays an important role in the regulation of mood. The serotonin system has been extensively implicated in the regulation of stress and anxiety, as well as the reinforcing properties of all of the major classes of drugs of abuse, including alcohol. Dysregulation within the 5-HT system has been postulated to underlie the negative mood states associated with alcohol use disorders. This review will describe the serotonergic (5-HTergic) neuroplastic changes observed in animal models throughout the alcohol addiction cycle, from prenatal to adulthood exposure. The first section will focus on alcohol-induced 5-HTergic neuroadaptations in offspring prenatally exposed to alcohol and the consequences on the regulation of stress/anxiety. The second section will compare alterations in 5-HT signalling induced by acute or chronic alcohol exposure during adulthood and following alcohol withdrawal, highlighting the impact on the regulation of stress/anxiety signalling pathways. The third section will outline 5-HTergic neuroadaptations observed in various genetically-selected ethanol preferring rat lines. Finally, we will discuss the pharmacological manipulation of the 5-HTergic system on ethanol- and anxiety/stress-related behaviours demonstrated by clinical trials, with an emphasis on current and potential treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Serotonin; alcohol addiction; alcohol-related disorders; anxiety; depression; stress
Year: 2016 PMID: 29765841 PMCID: PMC5928559 DOI: 10.3233/BPL-150022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Plast ISSN: 2213-6304
Changes in 5-HTergic neuroplasticity following prenatal alcohol exposure
| Species | Model | Dose of ethanol | Route of administration | BEC | Duration of treatment | Results | Ref # |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Rhombencephalon neuronal culture | 25 to 100 nM | culture media | – | 4 days | Increased apoptosis of fetal rhonbencephalic neurons and reduced number of 5-HT neurons. That is prevented by cotreatment with ipsapirone 100nM | 38 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 20% (EDC) | liquid diet | 65 mg/dl on E14 | From E8 to E15 | 20–30% fewer 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons in the Raphe and retard of migration in E15 embryos | 37 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 20% (EDC) | liquid diet | – | From E8 to E16 | Reduced number of 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons inMR and DR. Decreased 5-HT-immunoreactive fibers in the medial forebrain bundle (MFB). Reduced 5-HT fiber diameter | 36 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 20 or 25% (EDC) | liquid diet | 44.3±11.6 (E8), 54.7±14.2 (E11), 142.7±49.5 (E14) and 72.8+19.1 (E17) mg/dl | From E7 or E8.5 | 60% of embryos at E13 and 20% at E15 showed perforation of the floor plate in the diencephalic vesicle. 70–80% of embryos failed to complete the formation of neural tissue at the roof. 60–80% of embryos showed delayed closure of the ventral canal | 32 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 25% (EDC) | liquid diet | – | From E7 to E11 or E13 | 20–30% fewer 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons in MR and DR and retard of migration in E11 and E13 embryos | 34 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 25% (EDC) | liquid diet | 142.7±49.5 (E14) and 72.8+19.1 (E17) mg/dl | From E7 to E18 | 20% reduction of 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons in the MR and DR at E18 and 30% at P45 | 42 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 25% (EDC) | liquid diet | 142.7±49.5 (E14) and 72.8+19.1 (E17) mg/dl | E7 to E15 or E18 | Fewer 5-HT-immunoreactive fibers in theMFB and along the projecting pathway through the hypothalamus, septal nucleus, frontal and parietal cortices, and HIP. Underdevelopment of the brain regions along 5-HT fiber projections. Underdevelopment of somatosensory thalamocortical projections, which are known to transiently express 5-HT transporters and to be regulated by 5-HT | 54 |
| C57BL6 mice | foetal exposure | 25% (EDC) | liquid diet | – | From E7 to E13 | Reduced whole brain concentration of 5-HT in E13 animals | 48 |
| Wistar rats | foetal exposure | 2×2.9 g/kg (4 hr interval) | IP injection | 446 mg/dl | Only at E8 | Increased 5-HT1 function at P45: increased forepaw treading and hind limb abduction induced by 5-MeODMT (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.). Increased 5-HT2A function at P45: increased head twitch response to 5-HTP (150 mg/kg, s.c.) | 65 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | – | For 4 to 6 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation (alcohol removed at postnatal day 3) | Brain stem: reduction of 40–60% of 5-HT (E15, E19 and P5) and 24 to 60% of 5-HIAA (E19 and P5). Cortex: reduction of 40% of 5-HT (P5) and 25% of 5-HIAA (E19 and P5). 5-HT1A binding: increased in the brainstem, decreased in the cortex. No difference in 5-HT1B binding | 35 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | – | 6 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | 28 to 40% reduction of 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons in the MR and DR | 43 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 80–120 mg/dl | 7 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | P5: Decreased 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons of 32% in DR and 24% in MR at P5 and 32% in DR and 27% in MR at P19. Maternal treatment with ipsapirone (3 mg/kg/day, from E13 to E20) prevents these deficits | 44 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 110 mg/dl | 8 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | Decreased levels of 5-HT and 5-HIAA in the cortex, brainstem and cerebellum of P19 and P35 rats | 47 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 110 mg/dl | 6 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | Buspirone 4.5 mg/kg/day subcutaneously from E13 to E20 prevents the 50% reduction of 5-HT content in the cortex at P5 and the 30% reduction at P19. | 53 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 120–130 mg/dl | 4–6 weeks prior to breeding and during pregnancy | Reduced 5-HT uptake sites in synaptosomes from motor cortex with 30% decrease of Km for 5-HT in P35 animals | 58 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 75 to 120 mg/dl | 6 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | Reduced SERT binding in the frontal cortex and parietal cortices, lateral hypothalamus, substantia nigra, medial septum and striatum of P19 and P35 animals. Most of these effects are prevented by maternal treatment with buspirone (4.5 mg/kg/day from E13 to E20, s.c.) | 59 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 75 to 120 mg/dl | 6 weeks prior to breeding and during gestation | Increased 5-HT1A binding in the dentate gyrus but decreased in the parietal cortex and lateral septum in P35 animals. Maternal treatment with buspirone (E13 to E20, 4.5 mg/kg/day, s.c.) prevents most of these alterations. No change in 5-HT2A binding | 62 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | 130 mg/dl | 4–6 weeks prior to breeding and during pregnancy | Decreased of 5-HT1 binding sites: 20% in whole cortex, 38% in motor cortex and 10–30% in somatosensory cortex of both P19 and P37 animals | 61 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | – | During whole pregnancy | Increased response to the hypothermic effect of 5-HT1A agonist (8OHDPAT, 0.125 and 0.5 mg/kg, s.c.) in 70–90 day-old animals. Increased head-twitch response to 5-HT2A agonist in 70–90 day-old females | 63 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 6.6% v/v, | liquid diet | – | During whole pregnancy | Increased novelty-induced anxiety-like behaviour and anxiolytic effects of 5-HT1A agonist (8OHDPAT, 0.06 mg/kg, s.c.) in females (P22) | 64 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 0.5, 1 and 2 g/kg ethanol once a day | subcutaneously injection | 3.32, 40.73 and 106.56 mg/dl in the 0.5, 1 and 2 g/kg groups, respectively | From E15 until birth | 5–15% reduction of 5-HT- and TPH-immunoreactive neurons at 3 and 5 weeks after birth, in a dose dependent manner | 45 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 36% (EDC) | liquid diet | – | From E1 to E22 | Decreased 5-HT-immunoreactive neurons in the DR (but not MR), rescued by oestrogen treatment (0.05 mg in pellet) in ovariectomized female | 46 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 36% (EDC) | liquid diet | 127 mg/100 ml | From E8 to birth | SERT binding in the cortex = decreased (P21, P40 and P60), in HIP = increased (P21, P40 and P60), in the BLA = increased (P21, P40 and P60), LA = increased (P40 and P60)VMH = decreased (P21) | 56 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | foetal exposure | 36% (EDC) | liquid diet | – | From gestational day 1 to E21 or birth | Reduced SERT mRNA in the brain of E21 foetus. Higher methylation of SERT in the hypothalamus of females at P55 | 57 |
| Wistar rats | foetal exposure | 8–16% w/v as sole drinking fluid | forced drinking | – | 3.5 months of 8% and 1 month of 16% before birth | Decreased 5-HTP levels in the whole brain without cerebellum of 5 month-old females | 49 |
| Rhesus monkeys | sweetened alcohol | 0.6 g/kg/day | liquid diet | 20–50 mg/dl | Early gestation (days 0 to 50), middle to late gestation (days 50 to 135) or continuous (days 0 to 135) | Early- and middle-to-late gestation-alcohol exposed monkeys carrying the short allele of the SERT had lower concentrations of 5-HIAA in the CSF | 50 |
| Human FAE/FAS children | maternal alcohol consumption | – | voluntary drinking | – | – | Reduced SERT binding in the mPFC of 7–14 year-old FAE/FAS children (SPECT) | 60 |
Abbreviations: NAC, nucleus accumbens; VTA, ventral tegmental area; AMG, amygdala; BLA, basolateral amygdala; LA, lateral amygdala; HIP, hippocampus; PFC, prefrontal cortex; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; DR, dorsal raphe; MR, median raphe; TPH, tryptophan hydroxylase; EDC, ethanol derived calories.
Changes in 5-HTergic neuroplasticity following acute and chronic ethanol exposure
| Species | Model | Dose of ethanol | Route of administration | BEC | Duration oftreatment | Results | Ref # |
| Wistar rats | Acute injection or reverse microdialyse | 0.5, 1 or 2 g/kg (injection) or 25, 50 or 100 mM (dialyse) | IP or local infusion in the NAC | – | Acute | IP injection: 2.0 g/kg markedly increases 5-HT levels in the NAC within 15 min. Reverse microdialysis: 100 mM ethanol increases 5-HT levels for 1 hr in the NAC | 116 |
| Wistar rats | Acute injection or reverse microdialyse | 0.5, 1 or 2 g/kg (injection) or 25, 50 or 100 mM (dialyse) | IP or local infusion in the CeA | – | Acute | IP injection: 1.0 and 2.0 g/kg markedly increases 5-HT levels in the AMG within 20 min. Reverse microdialysis: ethanol dose-dependently increases 5-HT levels for 2 hr in the AMG | 117 |
| Lewis and Fisher rats | Acute injection | 0.5, 1 or 2 g/kg | IP | – | Acute | Ethanol 1 g/kg and 2 g/kg increased 5-HT levels in the NAC (44%) (in Lewis but not Fisher rats) | 118 |
| Wistar BgVV and Wistar-Harlan rats | Acute injection | 1 g/kg | IP | 111–113 mg/dl | Acute | Microdialysis: Ethanol 1 g/kg (ip) or exposure in the elevated-plus maze increases 5-HT release in the mPFC of Wistar-BgVV rats | 119 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Acute injection | 0.1, 1 and 10% (v/v) | Local infusion in the VTA | – | Acute | Microdialysis: 10% ethanol increases 5-HT levels in the VTA, which is not blocked by Ca2+ depletion or TTX (1uM) | 120 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Acute injection | 16% (w/v) | IP | 50–80 mM | Acute | Microdialysis: increased levels of 5-HIAA in the striatum | 121 |
| Wistar rats | Acute injection | 0.1 and 1 g/kg | IP | – | Acute | Microdialysis: ethanol 0.1 and 1 g/kg (ip) increases 5-HIAA in the NAC | 122 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Acute injection | 0.5, 1, and 2 g/kg | IP | – | Acute | Microdialysis: Ethanol 0.5, 1, and 2 g/kg increases 5-HT in the NAC | 125 |
| Sprague Dawley, F344 and Lewis rats | Acute injection | 20–160 mM | bath (Slices) | – | Acute | Electrophysiology: Ethanol dose-dependly increases VTA neuron firing rate. 5-HT potentiates the increasing effect of ethanol on VTA neuron firing rates, which is replicated by the 5-HT2 agonist DOI (50nM and 2uM) | 126 |
| C57Bl6 mice | Acute injection | 30 mM | bath (Slices) | – | Acute | Electrophysiology: Ethanol (30 mM) inhibits DR 5-HT neuron excitability via activation of extrasynaptic glycine receptors | 128 |
| ICR mice | Acute and repeated | 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 or 4.0 g/kg | IP | – | Acute or Repeated (1.0 or 2.0 g/kg once daily for 7 days) | Microdialysis: Acute, 5-HIAA concentrations were increased in the hypothalamus after injection of 3.0 and 4.0 g/kg of ethanol. Repeated, no change observed in 5-HIAA concentration | 123 |
| Wistar rats | Acute and repeated | 2.5 g/kg | IP | – | Acute or 1 repeated injections (24 h after) | Microdialysis: Acute ethanol increases 5-HT levels in the caudate putamen. Repeated: pretreatment with ethanol slightly decreases the elevation in 5-HT induced by ethanol, as compared to a single injection. Electrophysiology in awake animals: Ethanol reduces the firing frequency of 5-HT neurons | 124 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Acute and repeated | acute: 0.25–1.0 g/kg. Chronic: 1–5 g/kg every 6hr for 6 days + challenge (0.25–1 g/kg, i.v.) | acute: intravenous. Chronic: intragastric + intravenous challenge | – | Acute or repeated (for 6 days) | Electrophysiology: Acutely, ethanol decreases the firing rate of 5-HT DR neurons. Reduction of basal electrical activity of 5-HT neurons, 12 h after withdrawal from chronic ethanol. No change in 5-HT1A agonist (8-OHDPAT, 1–16 μg/kg, i.v.) sensitivity to reduce the firing rate after withdrawal | 127 |
| Wistar rats | Acute and repeated | 2×2.5 g/kg | IP | 237–256 mg/dl | Acute (2 injections in 2 days) | A single ip injection of ethanol 2.5 g/kg increases 5-HT levels in the ventral HIP. A second ip injection of ethanol 2.5 g/kg 24 hrs after does not elevate 5-HT levels | 113 |
| Rat (not precised) | Early postnatal gavage | 5 g/kg/day | intragastric | 325.7 mg/dl | Chronic (P4 to 10) | Early postnatal ethanol exposure increases 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations in the HIP of females but not males | 129 |
| Rat (not precised) | Early postnatal gavage | 6 g/kg/day | intragastric | 327.8 to 347.6 mg/dl | Chronic (P4 to 10) | A single ip injection of ethanol 2.5 g/kg increases 5-HT levels in the ventral HIP. A second ip injection of ethanol 2.5 g/kg 24 hrs after does not elevate 5-HT levels | 130 |
| Fischer 344 rats | Chronic diet | 6.6% v/v | liquid diet | 60 to 100 mg/dl | 6 weeks | Ethanol reduces 5-HT tissue content in the VTA of 14-month old animal but increases 5-HIAA concentration in the striatum, globus pallidus, NAC, frontal cortex, VTA and ventral pallidum of 24-month old animals | 132 |
| Fischer 344 rats | Chronic diet | 6.6% v/v | liquid diet | 60 to 100 mg/dl | 6 weeks | Increased 5-HT2A binding in the NAC of 5-month old ethanol fed rats | 146 |
| C57Bl6 mice | SHAC | 5% v/v | drinking solution | 109 mg/dl | 1 or 6 days | Increased extracellular concentration of 5-HT in the NAC of ethanol -inexperienced animals (SHAC1) but the 5-HT levels are no longer elevated in ethanol-experienced animals (SHAC6) | 115 |
| Wistar rats | Sucrose fading | gradually from SUC 10% / ETH 5% to SUC 5% /ETH 10% | drinking solution | 15.7 mg/dl | 50 days | History of ethanol/sucrose drinking reduces 5-HT content in the medial thalamus and medial hypothalamus and the 5-HIAA/5-HT ratio in the PFC pyriform, motor, auditory, visual and somatosensory cortices and medial thalamus | 133 |
| C57Bl6 mice | Chronic free choice drinking (3 water/1 ethanol bottles) | 0 to 10% v/v | drinking solution | – | 21 days | No change in 5-HTP, 5-HT or 5-HIAA levels in the striatum. Increased 5-HT1A sensitivity to ipsapirone (2 or 3 mg/kg, i.p.)-mediated reduction of 5-HTP accumulation and 5-HT neuron firing rate. Increased 5-HT1A-mediated GTPgammaS coupling in the DR. No difference in 8-OHDPAT-induced hypothermia | 142 |
| Wistar rats | Chronic diet + withdrawal + re-exposure | 7.2% v/v | liquid diet | 288 mg/dl | 10 or 21 days | Ethanol reduces 5-HT tissue content in the the cortex and striatum and increases 5-HIAA contents in the HIP after 10 days of exposure | 134 |
| Wistar rats | Withdrawal from chronic diet | 7.2% v/v | liquid diet | 289 mg/dl | 21 days + 2, 4 or 6 h of withdrawal | Decreased 5-HT tissue content in the cortex 4 h after withdrawal but Increased levels after audiogenic seizures (>6 hrs). Increased 5-HIAA in the cortex after 2 h of withdrawal. Decreased 5-HT in the striatum after 2, 4 and 6 hrs of withdrawal and after audiogenic seizures. No changes in 5-HT levels in the HIP but decreased 5-HIAA contents after 2 h of withdrawal and after audiogenic seizures | 135 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Withdrawal from chronic diet | 9% v/v | liquid diet | 255 mg/dl | 14 days | Increase in 5-HT1A binding in the DR (+30%) but decrease in the HIP (–20%) and the cortex (–30%). Increase in 5-HT1B in the globus pallidus | 143 |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Withdrawal from chronic diet | 9% v/v | liquid diet | – | 14 days | Effect of 5-HT1A agonist (8-OHDPAT, 2.5 mg/kg ip) is sensitized on lower lip retraction but desensitized on flat body posture after 18 h of withdrawal | 144 |
| DBA2 mice | Chronic intermittent vapour | – | Vapour | 150–200 mg/dl | 5 days, 16 h/day | 5-HT2C antagonist (SB242,084, 3 mg/kg, ip) normalizes ethanol-induced anxiety and reduces ethanol-induced fos immunoreactivity in the ventral BNST. Ethanol increases 5-HT2C signalling in the ventral BNST | 149 |
| DBA2 mice | Chronic intermittent vapour | – | Vapour | 150–200 mg/dl | 5 days of 16 h/day followed by 24 h or 7 day withdrawal | Chronic ethanol exposure enhances the net activity of 5-HT neurons by reducing inhibitory transmission during early withdrawal and increasing excitatory transmission during late withdrawal. Chronic ethanol exposure also sensitizes the inhibitory effect of subsequent acute ethanol exposure | 162 |
| C57BL/6J, C3H/HeJ and DBA/2J inbred mice | Chronic intermittent vapour followed by 2 bottle choice | 22–27 mg/l (vapour) and 10% v/v (drinking) | vapour and drinking solution | 50 mg/dl after vapour session | 20 days, 3–6 h/d, followed by 5 h withdrawal and 4 h drinking | Alterations in 5-HT2C RNA editing in the NAC and the DR in C57bl6 mice following chronic ethanol exposure | 147 |
| C57Bl6 mice | 180–200 mg/dl | 20 days, 4–8 h/day | Decreased 5-HT and 5-HT/5-HIAA ratio in the DR and HIP. Increased mRNA expression of 5-HT2A, 2C and 7 in the DR, striatum and HIP following 20 days of alcohol vapour exposure. Increased alcohol-induced 5-HT release in the NAC of ethanol vapour-experienced animals. | 148 | |||
| Rhesus monkeys | Chronic 2 bottle choice | 4% v/v | drinking solution | – | 13 months | Increase 5-HT1A binding (PETSCAN) in cortex, AMG and HIP | 145 |
| Macaques | operant self- administration | 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 g/kg | drinking solution | 90 mg/dl | 12 months | Increased expression and G protein-coupling of 5-HT1A receptors in the HIP | 150 |
| Macaques | operant self- administration | 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 g/kg | drinking solution | 90 mg/dl | 13 months | Decreased SERT binding in the HIP | 154 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | 15 years of drinking | Increased 5-HT1B binding in the pallidum/NAC of alcohol dependent subjects | 151 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | 27 years of drinking | Decreased 5-HT1A-induced prolactin and cortisone release following a challenge of the 5-HT1A agonist Flevinoxan (1 mg/70 kg of body weight, iv) | 152 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 30% reduction of 5-HT1A binding in the anterior cingulate cortex of type 1 alcoholics | 153 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | 95 g/day (90 kg) | 1 to 30 years | The longer duration of excessive alcohol consumption the lower PRL response to D-fenfluramine | 155 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | 3–5 weeks of abstinence | 30% reduction of SERT binding in the brainstem | 156 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 30% reduction of SERT binding in the AMG | 157 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 26% reduction of SERT binding in the dorsal striatum | 158 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 35% increase of SERT binding in the NAC | 159 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 25% reduction of SERT binding in the cingulate cortex | 161 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | – | - (post mortem) | 35% reduction of SERT binding in the cingulate cortex | 162 |
| Human | Alcoholics | – | – | 128 mg/dl at admission | 19 years | Plasma 5-HT concentration decreases during 14 days after withdrawal | 160, 163 |
Abbreviations: NAC, nucleus accumbens; VTA, ventral tegmental area; AMG, amygdala; BLA, basolateral amygdala; LA, lateral amygdala; HIP, hippocampus; PFC, prefrontal cortex; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; DR, dorsal raphe; MR, median raphe; TPH, tryptophan hydroxylase; EDC, ethanol derived calories.
Changes in 5-HTergic neuroplasticity in alcohol-preferring rat lines
| Species | Model | Dose of ethanol | Route of administration | BEC | Duration of treatment | Results | Ref # |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Fewer 5-HT-immunostained (5-HT-IM) neurons and reduced 5-HT content in the DRN of P rats | 222 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Decreased levels of 5-HT and 5-HIAA in the HIP, NAC, and cortex of P rats | 224, 228 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Reduced density of 5-HT fibres in HIP, caudate-putamen, and hypothalamus of the P. Fewer fine 5-HT fibres in PFC and HIP of P rats | 225-223 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Lower 5-HT fibre density is in the cingulate and frontal cortices, HIP and hypothalamus of P rats | 226 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | No difference in firing frequencies, the percentages of action potentials in bursts, and the percentages of bursting in P and nP rats, as compared to Wistar rats | 229 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Higher density of 5-HT1A binding sites in mPFC, parietal, cingulate (20–30%), retrosplenial, occipital and temporal (35–40%), entorhinal cortex (15%) cortices, HIP (10–15%), DRN an MRN (15–20%) in periadolescent and adult P rats | 232, 233 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Lower 5-HT1B receptor densities in the cingulate and retrosplenial cortices, septum, and AMG of P rats | 235 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | 30% decrease of 5-HT3 binding sites in the AMG of P rats | 236 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Reduced 5-HT2A binding sites (50–70%) in mPFC, frontal and parietal cortices of P rats | 237 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | 5-HT2 binding sites are reduced in mPFC, frontal, cingulate, parietal, and temporal cortices (–15–25%), NAC, olfactory tubercle, and caudate-putamen (40–50%) of P rats | 238 |
| P vs NP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Higher 5HT2C binding sites in the HIP, AMG and the choroid plexus in P rats. Increased 5HT2C receptor coupling in the choroid plexus of P rats | 234 |
| P rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 6 or 8 weeks | Microdialysis: Reduced 5-HT extracellular levels (–35%) in the NAC of serotonin following 8 weeks of continuous access to ethanol compared with water controls and animals deprived of ethanol for 2 weeks | 230 |
| P vs NP and Wistar rats. | Injection | 1.0 g/kg | i.p. | – | 5 days. | Decreased basal extracellular 5-HT levels in the NAC of P rats but increased in Wistar and NP rats | 231 |
| P vs NP and Wistar rats. | Injection | 0.5–1.0 g/kg | i.p. | – | Acute | Basal anxiety is elevated in P rats, which is normalized by ethanol pretreatment | 239 |
| sP vs sNP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Lower 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations in the frontal cortex of sP rats | 243 |
| sP vs sNP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Reduced 5-HT2-mediated head dog shake response in sP rats | 245 |
| sP vs sNP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Lower 5HT2A binding sites in mPFC, prefrontal and cingulate cortices of sP rats. No significant difference was found in other areas between groups. Reduced head dog shake response to 5-HT2A receptor agonist microinjected into the mPFC in sP rats | 246 |
| sP vs sNP rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Increased anxiety and higher CRF levels in the AMG in sP rats | 247 |
| sP rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | Acute | Basal anxiety is elevated in P rats, which is normalized by ethanol pretreatment | 240 |
| sP vs sNP and Wistar rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 14 days | Reduced density of 5-HT fibres in the cingulate cortex, the NAC shell and DR but not in the striatum, NAC core, HIP and MR of sP rats | 242 |
| sP vs sNP rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 14–15 days | Higher basal anxiety level in ethanol-naïve sP rats, which is normalized by ethanol exposure | 248, 249 |
| FH vs Wistar rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | FH rats have more depressive-like behaviours | 250 |
| FH vs wistar rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Decrease 5-HT1A induced hypothermia and 5-HT2-induced hyperthermia. No significant difference in the of 5-HT or 5-HIAA levels in the mPFC, HIP hypothalamus and striatum. Decreases 5-HT and 5-HIAA levels in the brain stem with higher 5-HT turnover rate in the hypothalamus, striatum and HIP | 255 |
| FH vs wistar rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Decreased density of 5-HT1A binding sites in striatum and brainstem and increased density of 5-HT2 binding sites in the striatum and frontal cortex | 256 |
| FH vs Sprague-Dawley rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Chronic fluoxetine treatment causes hypersensitisation of MR 5-HT1A receptors and desensitisation of hypothalamic 5-HT1A receptor in FH rats | 258 |
| FH vs Sprague-Dawley rats | Naive | – | – | – | – | Increased 5-HT uptake sites in the HIP, brainstem and striatum and decreased 5-HT levels in the brainstem of FH rats. Higher density of 5-HT2C receptors in the cortex of FH rats | 260 |
| FH vs WKY rats | 2 bottle choice | 5% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 28 days of followed by 24 to 48 hrs of withdrawal | Increased SERT expression in the NAC, lateral septum ventral pallidum and VTA of alcohol-na:ive FH rats. Increased density of 5-HT1A receptors in the frontal and parietal occipital and temporal cortices and HIP. No change in 5-HT3 receptor binding. Chronic ethanol consumption decreases 5-HT1A binding in the frontal and parietal cortices but increases binding in the entorhinal cortex and HIP. Hippocampal 5-HT1A binding returns to the levels of ethanol-naive rats following withdrawal | 257 |
| FH/Wjd vs ACI/N rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 6 weeks | FH rats have more depressive-like behaviours | 254 |
| FH/Wjd vs ACI/N rats | 2 bottle choice | 10% v/v | Drinking solution | – | 2 weeks | Reduced 5-HT3 in PFC, HIP and AMG of FH/Wjd rats. The anxiolytic effect of 5-HT3 receptor blockade is lost in FH/Wjd rats | 259 |
Abbreviations: NAC, nucleus accumbens; VTA, ventral tegmental area; AMG, amygdala; BLA, basolateral amygdala; LA, lateral amygdala; HIP, hippocampus; PFC, prefrontal cortex; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; DR, dorsal raphe; MR, median raphe; TPH, tryptophan hydroxylase; EDC, ethanol derived calories.