Alcohol‐induced changes in mesostriatal resting‐state functional connectivity are linked to sensation seeking in young adults

Author:

Morales Angelica M.1ORCID,Gilbert Sydney1,Hart Elijah1,Jones Scott A.1,Boyd Stephen J.2,Mitchell Suzanne H.134ORCID,Nagel Bonnie J.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

2. Department of Psychiatry Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

4. Department of Psychiatry Oregon Institute of Occupational Health Sciences Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStudies in animals and humans suggest that greater levels of sensation seeking and alcohol use are related to individual differences in drug‐induced dopamine release. However, it remains unclear whether drug‐induced alterations in the functional synchrony between mesostriatal regions are related to sensation seeking and alcohol use.MethodsIn this within‐subject masked‐design study, 21‐year‐old participants (n = 34) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure ventral tegmental area (VTA) resting‐state functional connectivity to the striatum after receiving alcohol (target blood alcohol concentration 0.08 g/dL) or placebo. Participants also completed the UPPS‐P Impulsive Behavior Scale to assess sensation seeking, the Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire, and self‐reported patterns of alcohol and drug use.ResultsVoxel‐wise analyses within the striatum demonstrated that during the alcohol condition (compared with placebo) young adults had less connectivity between the VTA and bilateral caudate (p < 0.05 corrected). However, young adults exhibiting smaller alcohol‐induced decreases or increases in VTA‐left caudate connectivity reported greater sensation seeking.ConclusionThese findings provide novel information about how acute alcohol impacts resting‐state connectivity, an effect that may be driven by the complex pre and postsynaptic effects of alcohol on various neurotransmitters including dopamine. Further, alcohol‐induced differences in VTA connectivity represent a plausible mechanistic substrate underlying sensation seeking.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Wiley

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