Sigma (σ) receptors have been implicated in  the behavioral and motivational effects of alcohol and psychostimulants. 
Sigma  receptor antagonists reduce the reinforcing effects of alcohol and excessive  alcohol intake in both genetic (alcohol-preferring rats) and environmental  (chronic alcohol-induced) models of alcoholism. 
The present study tested the  hypothesis that pharmacological activation of σ-receptors  facilitates ethanol reinforcement and induces excessive, binge-like ethanol  intake.
 The effects of repeated subcutaneous treatment with the selective σ-receptor agonist 1,3-di-(2-tolyl)guanidine (DTG; 15 mg/kg, twice a day  for 7 days) on operant ethanol (10%) self-administration  were studied in Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) rats. To confirm that the  effect of DTG was mediated by σ-receptors, the effects of  pretreatment with the selective σ-receptor antagonist  BD-1063 (7 mg/kg, subcutaneously) were determined. To assess the specificity  of action, the effects of DTG on the self-administration of equally reinforcing  solutions of saccharin or sucrose were also determined. Finally, gene expression  of opioid receptors in brain areas implicated in ethanol reinforcement was  analyzed in ethanol-naive sP rats treated 
Repeatedly administered DTG progressively and  dramatically increased ethanol self-administration in sP rats and increased  blood alcohol levels, which reached mean values close to 100 mg% in 1 h drinking sessions. Repeated DTG treatment also  increased the rats’ motivation to work for alcohol under a progressive-ratio  schedule of reinforcement. BD-1063 prevented the effects of DTG, confirming that  σ-receptors mediate the effects of DTG. Repeated DTG  treatment also increased the self-administration of the non-drug reinforcers  saccharin and sucrose. 
Naive sP rats repeatedly treated with DTG showed  increased mRNA expression of μ- and δ-opioid receptors in the ventral tegmental  area. 
These results suggest a key facilitatory role for σ-receptors in the reinforcing effects of alcohol and identify a  potential mechanism that contributes to binge-like and excessive  drinking.
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