Why alcohol affects people in very different ways

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Researchers have found the key that could explain why alcohol affects people in different ways—a receptor gene variant.

A genetic variant of a receptor in the brain”s reward circuitry could determine whether the neurotransmitter dopamine is released in the brain following alcohol intake, found researchers at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).

Dopamine is involved in transmitting the euphoria and other positive subjective effects produced by alcohol.

The findings help explain the diverse genetic susceptibility for alcohol use disorders,

“By advancing our understanding of the neurobiology that underlies the addictive properties of alcohol, this finding helps us understand why alcohol affects people in very different ways. This kind of information also aids the development of personalized medications for alcohol problems,” said NIAAA Acting Director Dr. Kenneth R. Warren.

Receptors for brain molecules known as opioid peptides help initiate the neurochemical reactions that underlie the positive effects produced by alcohol.

Activation of the mu-subtype of opioid receptor following alcohol consumption triggers the release of dopamine from the forebrain.

“But there is much variation in alcohol-induced responses that are thought to be related to dopamine. Previous studies by our group and others suggest that variants of opioid genes may contribute to the observed variation, possibly through effects on alcohol-induced dopamine release,” explained Dr. Markus Heilig.

For example, he noted that people who carry the mu-opioid receptor variant designated as 118G report increased euphoria following alcohol consumption.

Heilig”s group has reported that a similar mu-opioid receptor variant in monkeys heightened the stimulating effects of alcohol and increased their alcohol consumption.

In the current study, first author Dr. Vijay A. Ramchandani and colleagues explored whether the 118G mu-opioid receptor variant influences dopamine release from a forebrain region called the ventral striatum in response to alcohol.

Using human positron emission tomography (PET), an imaging technique that allowed the researchers to analyze dopamine activity in the brain, they compared dopamine release in two groups of people that had been given a dose of alcohol.

The groups consisted of those who carried a copy of the gene for the 118G mu-opioid receptor variant, and those who carried only genes for the more common 118A variant.

They found that only people with the 118G variant had a dopamine response to alcohol – no such response happened in subjects with the 118A receptor variant.

“Taken together, our data strongly support a causal role of the 118G variant of the mu-opioid receptor to confer a more vigorous dopamine response to alcohol in the ventral striatum. The findings add further support to the notion that individuals who possess this receptor variant may experience enhanced pleasurable effects from alcohol that could increase their risk for developing alcohol abuse and dependence. It may also explain why these individuals, once addicted, benefit more from treatment with blockers of endogenous opioids,” said Ramchandani.

The study has appeared online in Molecular Psychiatry. (ANI)

Kids of depressed fathers ‘more likely to have psychological problems’

London, May 04 (ANI): Fathers’ mental health problems could be harmful for their kids, a new research has warned.

Researchers at University of Oxford said that such kids are more likely to have psychiatric or behavioural disorders.

They also said that boys in particular could be affected if their father had depression or was an alcoholic.

Te peak age for men to be affected by psychiatric disorders is the same as the peak age for becoming a father – between 18 and 35.

Paternal depression during the postnatal period, measured at eight weeks after birth, has been linked to increasing the chance of the child subsequently developing behavioural and emotional problems from 10 percent to 20 percent.
During the study, researchers found that teenage offspring of depressed fathers also have an increased risk of various psychological problems, including depression and suicidal behaviour.

Researchers said that around 2 percent of men are affected by generalised anxiety disorder, and children whose parents have anxiety disorders have a two-fold increased risk of developing such disorders themselves,

Paternal alcoholism is also linked to an increased risk of mood disorders, depressive symptoms, poor performance at school, low self-esteem and problems forming relationships.

The research team, led by psychiatrist Professor Paul Ramchandani, said more studies were needed on how fathers’ psychiatric disorders affect their children’s development.

“Men’s roles in bringing up children have changed significantly over the last century, with many dads now taking on an active ‘nurturing role’ so it’s important that there is more research into the relationship between fathers’ mental health problems and how these may affect their children,” the BBC quoted Emily Wooster, policy and campaign manager for the mental health charity Mind, as saying.

The study is published in The Lancet. (ANI)