Alcohol
Volume 31, Issue 1 , Pages 63-69, August 2003

Acetaldehyde-reinforcing effects: differences in low-alcohol-drinking (UChA) and high-alcohol-drinking (UChB) rats

Program of Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology ICBM, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, P.O. Box 70.000, Santiago 7, Chile

Received 5 May 2003; received in revised form 1 July 2003; accepted 6 July 2003.

Editor: T.R. Jerrells

Abstract 

It has been suggested that acetaldehyde has a biphasic effect on voluntary alcohol consumption. At low brain concentration, it might exert reinforcing effects, whereas high acetaldehyde levels would be predominantly aversive. The objective of the current study was to compare the effect of an intraperitoneal dose of acetaldehyde (50 mg/kg) in high-alcohol-drinking (UChB) and low-alcohol-drinking (UChA) rat lines, which differ in the activity of the brain mitochondrial class 2 aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2) as a consequence of differences in their ALDH2 genotypes. A classical place-conditioning procedure was used to determine the reinforcing or aversive (or both) effects of acetaldehyde in ethanol-naive UChB and UChA rats. Environmental cues were paired with an intraperitoneal 50-mg/kg injection of acetaldehyde. On 10 consecutive days, each rat received one place conditioning per day; the acetaldehyde-pairing was alternated with saline-pairing. Results showed that conditioning with the 50-mg/kg dose of acetaldehyde induced place preference in UChB rats and place aversion in UChA rats. In a second experiment, UChB and UChA rats, pretested for ethanol preference, were injected with one 50-mg/kg dose of acetaldehyde or saline and tested for their voluntary ethanol consumption during 4 weeks. Results showed that the acetaldehyde dose induced a persistent and long-lasting enhancement of ethanol intake in UChB rats, but not in UChA rats. These results, together with the finding that after administration of a 50-mg/kg dose of acetaldehyde cerebral venous blood acetaldehyde levels in UChA rats were consistently higher than levels in UChB rats, support the suggestion that differential acetaldehyde levels, differential brain ALDH2 activity, or both were responsible for the different effects of acetaldehyde in the two rat lines.

Keywords:  Acetaldehyde reinforcement, Conditioned place preference, Conditioned place aversion, Alcohol preference, Brain ALDH2 activity

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PII: S0741-8329(03)00188-5

doi:10.1016/j.alcohol.2003.07.001

Alcohol
Volume 31, Issue 1 , Pages 63-69, August 2003