Awardee OrganizationSTATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
Description
Abstract Text
One of the hallmarks of alcohol's many actions is it's frequent biphasic
effect. Low doses often produce activation of behavioral and
physiological characters. The behavioral activation is variously
described as a stimulant effect, euphoria, and disinhibition. Although
clear resolution of its dimensions is not yet available, such activating
effects are now receiving focus in some genetically based theories of
alcoholism. In Cloninger's scheme of alcoholic subtypes, Type II is
argued to use alcohol for these euphoriant effects, implying a genetically
based sensitivity to this domain of ethanol action. A general working
hypothesis states that these activational effects are somehow related to
the abuse potential of ethanol, and therefore represent an important
addiction liability. A small literature on neurobiological aspects of the
activation effect implicate brain dopamine systems, one neurotransmitter
known to be important in brain reward systems.
Laboratory studies of behavioral activation by ethanol have shown clear
genetic influences on this type of initial sensitivity. Mouse locomotor
activity has been the most highly investigated phenotype for this question
of ethanol activation. The studies outlined here have three general
goals. The first is the use of detailed breeding studies to continue our
genetic characterization of the activational effect. Our work has
suggested that a simple genetic system with as few as three genes might
influence this character, and several breeding designs will further test
this hypothesis. The second goal is the production of congenic strains of
mice where the genetic alleles producing activation in three different
stocks, are backcrossed onto the background of the C57BL/6 strain which
shows no ethanol-induced activation. Congenic strains are an extremely
powerful technique, not heretofore used in alcohol research. They will,
in the future, permit tests of specific hypotheses concerning the
behavioral, and neurobiological foundations of ethanol's activating
actions, and provide a strong tool for mapping and molecular biological
study. A third goal involves characterizing the psychopharmacological
phenomenology of the paradoxical activational effect of ethanol. We are
attempting to define the range of behaviors, such as aggressive behavior,
which are commonly genetically influenced in the domain of these
activational effects of ethanol.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
CFDA Code
273
DUNS Number
152652822
UEI
NHH3T1Z96H29
Project Start Date
01-August-1991
Project End Date
31-July-2000
Budget Start Date
01-August-1998
Budget End Date
31-July-2000
Project Funding Information for 1998
Total Funding
$222,952
Direct Costs
$151,462
Indirect Costs
$71,490
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
1998
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
$222,952
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
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