Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) overexpression in the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus alters motivated and affective behavior in female rats
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Background
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) has been found to be involved in a wide range of motivated and affective behaviors. While the PACAP-38 isoform is more densely expressed than PACAP-27 in most of the brain, PACAP-27 is more highly expressed in the rodent paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT), where females also have greater expression than males. Notably, the role of PACAP-27 expression in cells of the PVT has not been explored.
Methods
Adult, female Long-Evans rats were injected in the PVT with an AAV to increase expression of PACAP or a control AAV. They were then investigated for subsequent gene and peptide levels of PACAP in the PVT; ethanol drinking and preference; sucrose drinking and preference; or locomotor activity in a novel chamber, behavior in a light-dark box, behavior in a novelty suppression of feeding test, locomotor activity in a familiar activity chamber, and behavior in a forced swim test.
Results
Gene expression of PACAP was significantly increased in the PVT by four weeks after injection with the PACAP AAV, and this resulted in a specific increase in levels of PACAP-27. Rats injected with the PACAP AAV demonstrated reduced drinking and preference for ethanol under the intermittent-access procedure compared to those injected with the control AAV. In contrast, rats injected with the PACAP AAV showed no significant difference in drinking or preference for sucrose, or in any affective behavior tested, except that they spent less time swimming in the forced swim test.
Conclusions
In light of the low overall level of expression of PACAP-27 in the brain, the ability of PACAP-27 in the PVT to control ethanol drinking, with minimal effects on other motivated or affective behaviors, supports the idea that compounds related to PACAP-27 should be investigated as potential therapeutics for the treatment of alcohol use disorder.