2016
DOI: 10.1111/acer.13206
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Interactive Effects of Ethanol and HIV‐1 Proteins on Novelty‐Seeking Behaviors and Addiction‐Related Gene Expression

Abstract: Background Novelty-seeking behavior is related to the reward system in the brain and can predict the potential for addiction. Alcohol use is prevalent in HIV-1-infected patients and adversely affects anti-retroviral medication. The difference in vulnerability to alcohol addiction between HIV-1 infected and non-infected populations has not been fully investigated. This study was designed to determine whether HIV-1 proteins alter the effects of ethanol on novelty-seeking behavior using the HIV-1 transgenic (HIV-… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Behavioral control is the ability to override impulses and adjust behavior to respond appropriately to different stimuli ( Diamond, 2013 ; Kliethermes and Crabbe, 2006 ). Two to eight weeks of Tat exposure increased novelty-exploration in response to a novel environment, flavor, or food—coinciding with findings in HIV-1 transgenic rats (expressing multiple HIV proteins including Tat, Nef, and Vpr) demonstrating increased exploration in a novel environment ( Wingo et al, 2016 ; Yang et al, 2017 ), and extending prior findings by revealing that increased novelty-exploration seen in preclinical HAND models is observed across the presentation of different novel stimuli. Thus, exposure to Tat alone (versus other viral proteins or protein combinations) is sufficient to increase novelty-exploration.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Behavioral control is the ability to override impulses and adjust behavior to respond appropriately to different stimuli ( Diamond, 2013 ; Kliethermes and Crabbe, 2006 ). Two to eight weeks of Tat exposure increased novelty-exploration in response to a novel environment, flavor, or food—coinciding with findings in HIV-1 transgenic rats (expressing multiple HIV proteins including Tat, Nef, and Vpr) demonstrating increased exploration in a novel environment ( Wingo et al, 2016 ; Yang et al, 2017 ), and extending prior findings by revealing that increased novelty-exploration seen in preclinical HAND models is observed across the presentation of different novel stimuli. Thus, exposure to Tat alone (versus other viral proteins or protein combinations) is sufficient to increase novelty-exploration.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…This is also in line with previous reports of dopaminergic dysfunction in the Tg rats ( Webb et al, 2010 , Moran et al, 2013b , Moran et al, 2012 , Silvers et al, 2007 ) which probably parallels known susceptibility of the dopaminergic system to HIV in infected patients ( Kumar et al, 2011 , Kumar et al, 2009 , Chang et al, 2008 , Gelman et al, 2006 ). It again draws attention to the compounding effects of addiction drugs on a system that is already compromised, with worse damage seen in the Tg rats compared to WT rats under the effect of nicotine ( Yang et al, 2017 , Yang et al, 2016 , Song et al, 2016 , Cao et al, 2016 , Nesil et al, 2015 ), ethanol ( Wingo et al, 2016 , Sarkar et al, 2013 ), methamphetamine ( Moran et al, 2012 , Pang et al, 2013 , Henry et al, 2013 , Kass et al, 2010 , Liu et al, 2009 ) or cocaine administration ( Moran et al, 2013b , McIntosh et al, 2015 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although specific antiviral treatments allow control of the HIV‐1 replication process, Tat protein is still present in the body and can act by reinforcing the harmful effects of alcohol (Lawson et al., ). In addition, HIV‐1 proteins can modify the effects of alcohol on the brain by changing patterns of gene expression for neurotransmitter systems (dopaminergic, cholinergic, and glutamatergic) (Wingo et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%