4.7 Article

Orbitofrontal Neuroadaptations and Cross-Species Synaptic Biomarkers in Heavy-Drinking Macaques

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 13, Pages 3646-3660

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0133-17.2017

Keywords

alcohol; electrophysiology; genetics; orbitofrontal cortex; proteomics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [AA-020930, AA-023288, RR-024485, AA-024426, AA-019431, AA-013541, AA-016662, AA-013499, AA-010761, AA-009986, AA-021951, OD-11092]
  2. SC COBRE in Oxidants, Redox Balance, and Stress Signaling [P20 GM103542]
  3. Office of the Provost
  4. NIH/National Center for Research Resources [S10-OD-010731]

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Cognitive impairments, uncontrolled drinking, and neuropathological cortical changes characterize alcohol use disorder. Dysfunction of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), a critical cortical subregion that controls learning, decision-making, and prediction of reward outcomes, contributes to executive cognitive function deficits in alcoholic individuals. Electrophysiological and quantitative synaptomics techniques were used to test the hypothesis that heavy drinking produces neuroadaptations in the macaque OFC. Integrative bioinformatics and reverse genetic approaches were used to identify and validate synaptic proteins with novel links to heavy drinking in BXD mice. In drinking monkeys, evoked firing of OFC pyramidal neurons was reduced, whereas the amplitude and frequency of postsynaptic currents were enhanced compared with controls. Bath application of alcohol reduced evoked firing in neurons from control monkeys, but not drinking monkeys. Profiling of the OFC synaptome identified alcohol-sensitive proteins that control glutamate release (e.g., SV2A, synaptogyrin-1) and postsynaptic signaling (e.g., GluA1, PRRT2) with no changes in synaptic GABAergic proteins. Western blot analysis confirmed the increase in GluA1 expression in drinking monkeys. An exploratory analysis of the OFC synaptome found cross-species genetic links to alcohol intake in discrete proteins (e.g., C2CD2L, DIRAS2) that discriminated between low-and heavy-drinking monkeys. Validation studies revealed that BXD mouse strains with the D allele at the C2cd2l interval drank less alcohol than B allele strains. Thus, by profiling of the OFC synaptome, we identified changes in proteins controlling glutamate release and postsynaptic signaling and discovered several proteins related to heavy drinking that have potential as novel targets for treating alcohol use disorder.

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