Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic, relapsing psychiatric disorder that is characterized by the emergence of negative affective states. The transition from recreational, limited intake to uncontrolled, escalated intake is proposed to involve a transition from positive to negative reinforcement...

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Main Authors: M. Adrienne McGinn, Kimberly N. Edwards, Scott Edwards
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-08-01
Series:Neurobiology of Pain
Subjects:
ERK
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452073X20300106
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spelling doaj-e4be2c0521124a84b4e6697cd8ae514d2020-12-17T04:50:35ZengElsevierNeurobiology of Pain2452-073X2020-08-018100052Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivityM. Adrienne McGinn0Kimberly N. Edwards1Scott Edwards2Neurobiology of Addiction Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse IRP, United StatesDepartment of Physiology, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States; Alcohol & Drug Abuse Center of Excellence, LSU Health-New Orleans, United StatesDepartment of Physiology, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States; Alcohol & Drug Abuse Center of Excellence, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States; Neuroscience Center of Excellence, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States; Comprehensive Alcohol-HIV/AIDS Research Center, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States; Corresponding author at: Department of Physiology, LSU Health-New Orleans, United States.Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic, relapsing psychiatric disorder that is characterized by the emergence of negative affective states. The transition from recreational, limited intake to uncontrolled, escalated intake is proposed to involve a transition from positive to negative reinforcement mechanisms for seeking alcohol. Past work has identified the emergence of significant hyperalgesia/allodynia in alcohol-dependent animals, which may serve as a key negative reinforcement mechanism. Chronic pain has been associated with enhanced extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activity in cortical and subcortical nociceptive areas. Additionally, both pain and AUD have been associated with increased activity of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a key mediator of stress responsiveness. The objectives of the current study were to first determine relationships between thermal nociceptive sensitivity and alcohol drinking in male Wistar rats. While inflammatory pain induced by complete Freund’s adjuvant (CFA) administration did not modify escalation of home cage drinking in animals over four weeks, the relationship between drinking levels and hyperalgesia symptoms reversed between acute (1 week) and chronic (3–4 week) periods post-CFA administration, suggesting that either the motivational or analgesic effects of alcohol may be altered over the time course of chronic pain. We next examined ERK and GR phosphorylation in pain-related brain areas (including the central amygdala and prefrontal cortex subregions) in animals experiencing acute withdrawal from binge alcohol administration (2 g/kg, 6 h withdrawal) and CFA administration (four weeks) to model the neurobiological consequences of binge alcohol exposure in the context of pain. We observed a significant interaction between alcohol and pain state, whereby alcohol withdrawal increased ERK phosphorylation across all four frontocortical areas examined, although this effect was absent in animals experiencing chronic inflammatory pain. Alcohol withdrawal also increased GR phosphorylation across all four frontocortical areas, but these changes were not altered by CFA. Interestingly, we observed significant inter-brain regional correlations in GR phosphorylation between the insula and other regions investigated only in animals exposed to both alcohol and CFA, suggesting coordinated activity in insula circuitry and glucocorticoid signaling in this context. The results of these studies provide a greater understanding of the neurobiology of AUD and will contribute to the development of effective treatment strategies for comorbid AUD and pain.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452073X20300106AlcoholCentral amygdalaERKGlucocorticoid receptorPainPrefrontal cortex
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Adrienne McGinn
Kimberly N. Edwards
Scott Edwards
spellingShingle M. Adrienne McGinn
Kimberly N. Edwards
Scott Edwards
Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
Neurobiology of Pain
Alcohol
Central amygdala
ERK
Glucocorticoid receptor
Pain
Prefrontal cortex
author_facet M. Adrienne McGinn
Kimberly N. Edwards
Scott Edwards
author_sort M. Adrienne McGinn
title Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
title_short Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
title_full Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
title_fullStr Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
title_full_unstemmed Chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
title_sort chronic inflammatory pain alters alcohol-regulated frontocortical signaling and associations between alcohol drinking and thermal sensitivity
publisher Elsevier
series Neurobiology of Pain
issn 2452-073X
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic, relapsing psychiatric disorder that is characterized by the emergence of negative affective states. The transition from recreational, limited intake to uncontrolled, escalated intake is proposed to involve a transition from positive to negative reinforcement mechanisms for seeking alcohol. Past work has identified the emergence of significant hyperalgesia/allodynia in alcohol-dependent animals, which may serve as a key negative reinforcement mechanism. Chronic pain has been associated with enhanced extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activity in cortical and subcortical nociceptive areas. Additionally, both pain and AUD have been associated with increased activity of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a key mediator of stress responsiveness. The objectives of the current study were to first determine relationships between thermal nociceptive sensitivity and alcohol drinking in male Wistar rats. While inflammatory pain induced by complete Freund’s adjuvant (CFA) administration did not modify escalation of home cage drinking in animals over four weeks, the relationship between drinking levels and hyperalgesia symptoms reversed between acute (1 week) and chronic (3–4 week) periods post-CFA administration, suggesting that either the motivational or analgesic effects of alcohol may be altered over the time course of chronic pain. We next examined ERK and GR phosphorylation in pain-related brain areas (including the central amygdala and prefrontal cortex subregions) in animals experiencing acute withdrawal from binge alcohol administration (2 g/kg, 6 h withdrawal) and CFA administration (four weeks) to model the neurobiological consequences of binge alcohol exposure in the context of pain. We observed a significant interaction between alcohol and pain state, whereby alcohol withdrawal increased ERK phosphorylation across all four frontocortical areas examined, although this effect was absent in animals experiencing chronic inflammatory pain. Alcohol withdrawal also increased GR phosphorylation across all four frontocortical areas, but these changes were not altered by CFA. Interestingly, we observed significant inter-brain regional correlations in GR phosphorylation between the insula and other regions investigated only in animals exposed to both alcohol and CFA, suggesting coordinated activity in insula circuitry and glucocorticoid signaling in this context. The results of these studies provide a greater understanding of the neurobiology of AUD and will contribute to the development of effective treatment strategies for comorbid AUD and pain.
topic Alcohol
Central amygdala
ERK
Glucocorticoid receptor
Pain
Prefrontal cortex
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452073X20300106
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