Taurine enhances voluntary alcohol intake and promotes anxiolytic-like behaviors in rats.
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2020
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Resumo
Taurine is an amino acid usually added to energy drinks. In rodents, acute taurine administration de-
creases voluntary alcohol intake, and subchronic administration restores different behavioral features
impaired by alcohol withdrawal. In the present study, we evaluated the effects of chronic taurine
treatment on voluntary alcohol consumption and changes in behavioral parameters in rats. Adult male
Wistar rats were divided into two groups and were allowed to choose from two bottles containing 20%
alcohol or 0.08% saccharin (vehicle solution), or two bottles containing vehicle, 24 h per day, for 5 weeks.
After 3 weeks, rats received 100 mg/kg taurine (TAU) or saline (SAL) intraperitoneally once a day for 2
weeks, and daily alcohol consumption was monitored. On days 22 and 33, rats were tested in the open-
field, and on day 34, they were exposed to the light/dark task (LDT). Our results show for the first time
that chronic taurine treatment enhanced voluntary alcohol intake and preference in rats, and that these
changes were accompanied by an anxiolytic-like phenotype in alcohol-treated rats, possibly due to its
synergistic effect with alcohol on the dopaminergic and GABAergic systems.
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Mesh-divided, Amino acid, Drug addiction, Energy drinks, Ethanol
Citação
PULCINELLI, R. R. et al. Taurine enhances voluntary alcohol intake and promotes anxiolytic-like behaviors in rats. Alcohol v. 88, p. 55-63, 2020. Disponível em: <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0741832920302470?via%3Dihub>. Acesso em: 11 out. 2022.