Around 10%
of people will develop alcohol disorders, and a new study in mice shows that
having a specific genetic strand might be the reason some escalate from moderate
to excessive drinkers.
Previously,
scientists at the University of California, San Francisco showed that moderate
drinking activates a protein in the brain called brain-derived neurotrophic
factor (BDNF), which might protect against drinking too much.
In the new
study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry, they study what happens when
that threshold into excessive drinking is crossed. When mice consumed generous
amounts of alcohol for a long period of time—mimicking the human act of binge
drinking—their levels of the protective protein BDNF decreased significantly in
a part of their brains where decision-making occurs.
One possible reason for
this decline, the scientists discovered, was a corresponding increase in
genetic material microRNA, including miR-30a-5p.
When the
researchers increased miR-30a-5p in the mice brains themselves, BDNF went down
and mice wanted to drink more, preferring alcohol to water. When the scientists
inhibited the miR-30a-5p, the brains returned to normal, and so did the drinking
behaviors of the mice.
Though mice
studies can’t translate directly to humans, the researchers think a similar
situation may be happening in human brains during alcohol consumption, and that
perhaps certain people are genetically susceptible, as other research has also
suggested. The researchers hope their findings will provide better data for
alcoholism therapies.
Source-Time
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