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Corticotropin-Releasing Factor (CRF) Sensitization of Ethanol Withdrawal-Induced Anxiety-Like Behavior is Brain Site Specific and Mediated by CRF-1 Receptors: Relation to Stress-Induced Sensitization

Authors :
Overstreet, D. H.
Vale, W.
Rivier, J.
Knapp, D. J.
Wills, T. A.
Navarro, M.
Huang, M. M.
Breese, G. R.
Angel, R.
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, 2010.

Abstract

In abstinent alcoholics, stress induces negative affect—a response linked to craving and relapse. In rats, repeated stresses at weekly intervals before 5-day ethanol diet sensitize withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior (“anxiety”) that is blocked by a corticotrophin-releasing factor 1 (CRF-1)-receptor antagonist. Current experiments were performed to identify brain sites that support CRF involvement in stress sensitization of ethanol withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior. First, different doses of CRF microinjected weekly into the central amygdala (CeA) before ethanol exposure produced a dose-related sensitization of anxiety during ethanol withdrawal. Subsequently, CRF microinjection into the basolateral amygdala, dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN), or dorsal bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (d-BNST) also sensitized ethanol withdrawal-induced anxiety. In contrast, sensitization of ethanol withdrawal-induced anxiety was not observed after weekly CRF administration into the ventral-BNST, CA1-hippocampal region, or hypothalamic-paraventricular nucleus. Then, experiments documented the CRF receptor subtype responsible for CRF and stress sensitization of withdrawal-induced anxiety. Systemic administration of a CRF-1 receptor antagonist before CRF microinjection into the CeA, DRN, or d-BNST prevented CRF-induced sensitization of anxiety during ethanol withdrawal. Furthermore, repeated microinjections of urocortin-3, a CRF-2 receptor agonist, into the CRF-positive sites did not sensitize anxiety after withdrawal from ethanol. Finally, microinjection of a CRF-1 receptor antagonist into the CeA, DRN, or d-BNST before stress blocked sensitization of anxiety-like behavior induced by the repeated stress/ethanol withdrawal protocol. These results indicate that CRF released by stress acts on CRF-1 receptors within specific brain regions to produce a cumulative adaptation that sensitizes anxiety-like behavior during withdrawal from chronic ethanol exposure.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1750ce8b5a5469bf2f2a33f62d5f6301
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17615/5p9d-9r86