Cargando…

Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration

Alcohol addiction is regarded as a series of dynamic changes to neural circuitries. A comparison of the global network during different stages of alcohol addiction could provide an efficient way to understand the neurobiological basis of addiction. Two animal models (P-rats screened from an alcohol...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Liu, Yue, Nie, Binbin, Liu, Taotao, Zheng, Ning, Liu, Zeyuan, Shan, Baoci, Jiang, Lihong, Manyande, Anne, Li, Xihai, Xu, Fuqiang, Wang, Jie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8615902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827473
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11111474
_version_ 1784604217960300544
author Liu, Yue
Nie, Binbin
Liu, Taotao
Zheng, Ning
Liu, Zeyuan
Shan, Baoci
Jiang, Lihong
Manyande, Anne
Li, Xihai
Xu, Fuqiang
Wang, Jie
author_facet Liu, Yue
Nie, Binbin
Liu, Taotao
Zheng, Ning
Liu, Zeyuan
Shan, Baoci
Jiang, Lihong
Manyande, Anne
Li, Xihai
Xu, Fuqiang
Wang, Jie
author_sort Liu, Yue
collection PubMed
description Alcohol addiction is regarded as a series of dynamic changes to neural circuitries. A comparison of the global network during different stages of alcohol addiction could provide an efficient way to understand the neurobiological basis of addiction. Two animal models (P-rats screened from an alcohol preference family, and NP-rats screened from an alcohol non-preference family) were trained for alcohol preference with a two-bottle free choice method for 4 weeks. To examine the changes in the neural response to alcohol during the development of alcohol preference and acute stimulation, different trials were studied with resting-state fMRI methods during different periods of alcohol preference. The correlation coefficients of 28 regions in the whole brain were calculated, and the results were compared for alcohol preference related to the genetic background/training association. The variety of coherence patterns was highly related to the state and development of alcohol preference. We observed significant special brain connectivity changes during alcohol preference in P-rats. The comparison between the P- and NP-rats highlighted the role of genetic background in alcohol preference. The results of this study support the alterations of the neural network connection during the formation of alcohol preference and confirm that alcohol preference is highly related to the genetic background. This study could provide an effective approach for understanding the neurobiological basis of alcohol addiction.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8615902
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-86159022021-11-26 Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration Liu, Yue Nie, Binbin Liu, Taotao Zheng, Ning Liu, Zeyuan Shan, Baoci Jiang, Lihong Manyande, Anne Li, Xihai Xu, Fuqiang Wang, Jie Brain Sci Article Alcohol addiction is regarded as a series of dynamic changes to neural circuitries. A comparison of the global network during different stages of alcohol addiction could provide an efficient way to understand the neurobiological basis of addiction. Two animal models (P-rats screened from an alcohol preference family, and NP-rats screened from an alcohol non-preference family) were trained for alcohol preference with a two-bottle free choice method for 4 weeks. To examine the changes in the neural response to alcohol during the development of alcohol preference and acute stimulation, different trials were studied with resting-state fMRI methods during different periods of alcohol preference. The correlation coefficients of 28 regions in the whole brain were calculated, and the results were compared for alcohol preference related to the genetic background/training association. The variety of coherence patterns was highly related to the state and development of alcohol preference. We observed significant special brain connectivity changes during alcohol preference in P-rats. The comparison between the P- and NP-rats highlighted the role of genetic background in alcohol preference. The results of this study support the alterations of the neural network connection during the formation of alcohol preference and confirm that alcohol preference is highly related to the genetic background. This study could provide an effective approach for understanding the neurobiological basis of alcohol addiction. MDPI 2021-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8615902/ /pubmed/34827473 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11111474 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Liu, Yue
Nie, Binbin
Liu, Taotao
Zheng, Ning
Liu, Zeyuan
Shan, Baoci
Jiang, Lihong
Manyande, Anne
Li, Xihai
Xu, Fuqiang
Wang, Jie
Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title_full Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title_fullStr Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title_full_unstemmed Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title_short Variations of Brain Functional Connectivity in Alcohol-Preferring and Non-Preferring Rats with Consecutive Alcohol Training or Acute Alcohol Administration
title_sort variations of brain functional connectivity in alcohol-preferring and non-preferring rats with consecutive alcohol training or acute alcohol administration
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8615902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827473
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11111474
work_keys_str_mv AT liuyue variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT niebinbin variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT liutaotao variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT zhengning variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT liuzeyuan variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT shanbaoci variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT jianglihong variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT manyandeanne variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT lixihai variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT xufuqiang variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration
AT wangjie variationsofbrainfunctionalconnectivityinalcoholpreferringandnonpreferringratswithconsecutivealcoholtrainingoracutealcoholadministration