“…Interestingly, despite its inability to antagonize opioid receptors, (+) naloxone was found to reduce stimulant-induced locomotor activity (Chatterjie, Alexander, Sechzer, & Lieberman, 1996;Chatterjie, Sechzer, Lieberman, & Alexander, 1998), which is congruent with findings suggesting that TLR4 contributes to the acute effects of drugs of abuse (Hutchinson et al, 2012) and the ability of opioid receptor antagonists to affect such responses (Wu et al, 2012). The activation of TLR4 predominantly contributes to glial activation and the subsequent release of numerous proinflammatory cytokines (Mayfield et al, 2013). Importantly, these TLR4-related processes are involved in the behavioral and neuroinflammatory effects of drugs of abuse (Mayfield et al, 2013), as TLR4 activation has been shown to be integral to alcohol-induced glial activation and proinflammatory signaling (Alfonso-Loeches, Pascual-Lucas, Blanco, Sanchez-Vera, & Guerri, 2010;Blanco, Pascual, Valles, & Guerri, 2004;Blanco, Valles, Pascual, & Guerri, 2005;Fernandez-Lizarbe, Pascual, & Guerri, 2009), as well as alcohol's behavioral effects in rodents (Wu et al, 2012).…”