“…Intriguingly, the alcohol behavioral phenotype of GRM5 KO mice is remarkably similar to that exhibited by mice with null mutations of the major Group 1 mGluR scaffolding protein Homer2 (Szumlinski et al, 2005) and by mice with null mutations of one of the downstream effectors of Group 1 mGluR activation PKCε (Olive et al, 2005). Moreover, in both GRM5 and Homer2 KO mice, the dose-response function for ethanol-induced conditioned place preference is shifted leftwards (Bird, Kirchhoff, Djouma, & Lawrence, 2008;Szumlinski et al, 2005; but see McGeehan & Olive, 2003), suggesting that the alcohol aversion exhibited by these mutant animals reflects a hyper-sensitivity to alcohol, thereby implicating a signaling pathway involving mGlu5 receptors, Homer proteins, and PKCε in regulating behavioral sensitivity to alcohol. In some support for this assertion, mice with a point mutation in mGlu5 receptors that prevents Homer scaffolding also exhibit blunted binge alcohol intake under limited-access procedures, although these mutants do not differ from WT controls regarding their alcohol intake under continuous-access procedures (Cozzoli et al, 2009(Cozzoli et al, , 2012.…”