| Literature DB >> 35700362 |
Johannes Knabbe1,2, Jil Protzmann2,3, Niklas Schneider2,4, Michael Berger5, Dominik Dannehl6, Shoupeng Wei7, Christopher Strahle2, Michèle Tegtmeier5, Astha Jaiswal8, Hongwei Zheng2, Marcus Krüger9, Karl Rohr8, Rainer Spanagel10, Ainhoa Bilbao7, Maren Engelhardt6,11, Henrike Scholz5, Sidney B Cambridge12,13.
Abstract
Alcohol intoxication at early ages is a risk factor for the development of addictive behavior. To uncover neuronal molecular correlates of acute ethanol intoxication, we used stable-isotope-labeled mice combined with quantitative mass spectrometry to screen more than 2,000 hippocampal proteins, of which 72 changed synaptic abundance up to twofold after ethanol exposure. Among those were mitochondrial proteins and proteins important for neuronal morphology, including MAP6 and ankyrin-G. Based on these candidate proteins, we found acute and lasting molecular, cellular, and behavioral changes following a single intoxication in alcohol-naïve mice. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed a shortening of axon initial segments. Longitudinal two-photon in vivo imaging showed increased synaptic dynamics and mitochondrial trafficking in axons. Knockdown of mitochondrial trafficking in dopaminergic neurons abolished conditioned alcohol preference in Drosophila flies. This study introduces mitochondrial trafficking as a process implicated in reward learning and highlights the potential of high-resolution proteomics to identify cellular mechanisms relevant for addictive behavior.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; addiction; ethanol; plasticity; two-photon microscopy
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35700362 PMCID: PMC9231489 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2122477119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779