Alcohol addiction is a chronically relapsing disorder that includes  certain maladaptive learning and memory. The serine and threonine kinase  complex, mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), has been implicated  in synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory by controlling protein translation.
  Here we show that administration of alcohol and excessive voluntary consumption  of alcohol induce the activation of the mTORC1-mediated signaling pathway in the  nucleus accumbens (NAc) of rodents.
 We further show that the protein expression  levels of GluR1 and Homer, two synaptic proteins whose translation has been  shown to be modulated by mTORC1, are up-regulated in the NAc of rodents with a  history of excessive alcohol consumption. 
In addition, our results document that  the Food and Drug Administration-approved inhibitor of mTORC1, rapamycin,  decreases expression of alcohol-induced locomotor sensitization and place  preference, as well as excessive alcohol intake and seeking in preclinical  rodent models of alcohol abuse. 
Together, our results suggest that mTORC1 within  the NAc is a contributor to molecular mechanisms underlying alcohol-drinking  behaviors.
 Furthermore, despite its massive health and socioeconomic impact  worldwide, pharmacotherapies for alcohol abuse and addiction remain limited.
 Our  data therefore put forward the possibility that targeting the mTORC1 signaling  cascade is an innovative and valuable strategy for the treatment of alcohol use  and abuse disorders. 
Request Reprint E-Mail:  dron@gallo.ucsf.edu.     

 
