The mechanisms involved in alcohol use disorders are complex. It has been  shown that ghrelin is an important signal for the control of body weight  homeostasis, preferably by interacting with hypothalamic circuits, as well as  for drug reward by activating the mesolimbic dopamine system. 
The ghrelin  receptor (GHS-R1A) has been shown to be required for alcohol-induced reward.  Additionally, ghrelin increases and GHR-R1A antagonists reduce moderate alcohol  consumption in mice, and a single nucleotide polymorphism in the GHS-R1A gene  has been associated with high alcohol consumption in humans. 
However, the role  of central ghrelin signaling in high alcohol consumption is not known.  Therefore, the role of GHS-R1A in operant self-administration of alcohol in rats  as well as for high alcohol consumption in Long-Evans rats and in alcohol  preferring [Alko alcohol (AA)] rats was studied here. 
In the present study, the  GHS-R1A antagonist, JMV2959, was found to reduce the operant self-administration  of alcohol in rats and to decrease high alcohol intake in Long-Evans rats as  well as in AA rats. 
These results suggest that the ghrelin receptor signaling  system, specifically GHS-R1A, is required for operant self-administration of  alcohol and for high alcohol intake in rats. 
Therefore, the GHS-R1A may be a  therapeutic target for treatment of addictive behaviors, such as alcohol  dependence.
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