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    Date Issued2021 (1)2014 (1)AuthorMartin, Gilles E. (2)
    Velazquez-Marrero, Cristina (2)
    Gimenez-Gomez, Pablo (1)Kolpakova, Jenya (1)Le, Timmy (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationBrudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute (2)Martin Lab (2)Department of Psychiatry (1)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (1)Neurobiology (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordSubstance Abuse and Addiction (2)Alcohol (1)Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (1)Animal Experimentation and Research (1)basolateral amygdala (1)View MoreJournalFrontiers in cellular neuroscience (1)The Journal of biological chemistry (1)

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    Binge Alcohol Drinking Alters Synaptic Processing of Executive and Emotional Information in Core Nucleus Accumbens Medium Spiny Neurons

    Kolpakova, Jenya; van der Vinne, Vincent; Gimenez-Gomez, Pablo; Le, Timmy; You, In-Jee; Zhao-Shea, Rubing; Velazquez-Marrero, Cristina; Tapper, Andrew R.; Martin, Gilles E. (2021-11-16)
    The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is a forebrain region mediating the positive-reinforcing properties of drugs of abuse, including alcohol. It receives glutamatergic projections from multiple forebrain and limbic regions such as the prefrontal cortex (PFCx) and basolateral amygdala (BLA), respectively. However, it is unknown how NAc medium spiny neurons (MSNs) integrate PFCx and BLA inputs, and how this integration is affected by alcohol exposure. Because progress has been hampered by the inability to independently stimulate different pathways, we implemented a dual wavelength optogenetic approach to selectively and independently stimulate PFCx and BLA NAc inputs within the same brain slice. This approach functionally demonstrates that PFCx and BLA inputs synapse onto the same MSNs where they reciprocally inhibit each other pre-synaptically in a strict time-dependent manner. In alcohol-naive mice, this temporal gating of BLA-inputs by PFCx afferents is stronger than the reverse, revealing that MSNs prioritize high-order executive processes information from the PFCx. Importantly, binge alcohol drinking alters this reciprocal inhibition by unilaterally strengthening BLA inhibition of PFCx inputs. In line with this observation, we demonstrate that in vivo optogenetic stimulation of the BLA, but not PFCx, blocks binge alcohol drinking escalation in mice. Overall, our results identify NAc MSNs as a key integrator of executive and emotional information and show that this integration is dysregulated during binge alcohol drinking.
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    Large conductance voltage- and Ca2+-gated potassium (BK) channel beta4 subunit influences sensitivity and tolerance to alcohol by altering its response to kinases

    Velazquez-Marrero, Cristina; Seale, Garrett E.; Treistman, Steven N.; Martin, Gilles E. (2014-10-17)
    Tolerance is a well described component of alcohol abuse and addiction. The large conductance voltage- and Ca(2+)-gated potassium channel (BK) has been very useful for studying molecular tolerance. The influence of association with the beta4 subunit can be observed at the level of individual channels, action potentials in brain slices, and finally, drinking behavior in the mouse. Previously, we showed that 50 mm alcohol increases both alpha and alphabeta4 BK channel open probability, but only alpha BK develops acute tolerance to this effect. Currently, we explore the possibility that the influence of the beta4 subunit on tolerance may result from a striking effect of beta4 on kinase modulation of the BK channel. We examine the influence of the beta4 subunit on PKA, CaMKII, and phosphatase modulation of channel activity, and on molecular tolerance to alcohol. We record from human BK channels heterologously expressed in HEK 293 cells composed of its core subunit, alpha alone (Insertless), or co-expressed with the beta4 BK auxiliary subunit, as well as, acutely dissociated nucleus accumbens neurons using the cell-attached patch clamp configuration. Our results indicate that BK channels are strongly modulated by activation of specific kinases (PKA and CaMKII) and phosphatases. The presence of the beta4 subunit greatly influences this modulation, allowing a variety of outcomes for BK channel activity in response to acute alcohol.
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