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Effects of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor signaling in the dorsolateral septum on ethanol operant self-administration and relapse behaviors.

Neuropharmacology · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on rats, a GLP-1 drug (Exendin 4) was injected into a brain region called the dorsolateral septum (dLS) to see if it could reduce alcohol intake and relapse behaviors. A dose of 25 nanograms of Exendin 4 lowered alcohol self-administration in male rats that drank heavily, but not in other groups. The same dose also reduced the reacquisition of alcohol self-administration, though it did not affect relapse triggered by alcohol exposure or context. No changes in food intake or body weight were observed.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNeuropharmacology, 2025
Citations1
Molecules
Conditions studied Alcohol Use Disorder

Abstract

Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a chronic relapsing disorder affecting more than 400 million people globally. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) has recently shown promise as a treatment for AUD but the underlying neural mechanisms are unclear. Given that dorsolateral septum (dLS) highly expresses GLP-1 receptors and is implicated in reward processing, this study investigated whether GLP-1 reduces ethanol intake and relapse behaviors via dLS. Long Evans rats were given intermittent access to 20 % ethanol solution before receiving training for ethanol operant self-administration. To examine relapse, operant self-administration was extinguished and two relapse tests were conducted: reacquisition of ethanol self-administration and prime + context-induced reinstatement of ethanol seeking. On self-administration test days, rats received intra-dLS injections of GLP-1 receptor agonist Exendin 4 (Ex4; 5 ng, 25 ng) or vehicle. During relapse tests, rats received intra-dLS infusion of either vehicle or 25 ng Ex4. Food intake and body weight were also measured. Results showed that intra-dLS Ex4 (25 ng) reduced ethanol self-administration in male high responders, but not in male low responders or females. Thus, only male rats were included in subsequent relapse tests. Intra-dLS Ex4 also reduced reacquisition of ethanol self-administration but had no impact on prime + context-induced reinstatement. No sustained changes in 24-h food intake or body weight were observed following intra-dLS Ex4 infusions. Finally, retrograde tracing results showed that dLS receive input from NTS GLP-1-expressing neurons. Together, these findings support the dLS as a key region in mediating the effects of GLP-1 receptor signaling on ethanol self-administration and reacquisition but suggest different contributing mechanisms in reinstatement of ethanol seeking.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 40818544 ↗