The present study was undertaken to examine whether genetically predetermined  differences in components of the endocannabinoid system were present in the  brain of Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) and Sardinian alcohol-non-preferring  (sNP) rats, a pair of rat lines selectively bred for opposite alcohol  preference. 
The effects of acquisition and maintenance of alcohol drinking,  alcohol withdrawal, and alcohol re-exposure on the endocannabinoid system was  also assessed in the striatum of sP rats. 
The findings revealed significantly  higher density of the CB1 receptors and levels of CB1 receptor mRNA, CB1  receptor-mediated G-protein coupling, and endocannabinoids in the cerebral  cortex, hippocampus and striatum of alcohol-naive sP rats than sNP rats. 
A  significantly lower expression of mFAAH enzyme was evident in the hippocampus of  alcohol-naive sP rats. 
Alcohol drinking (during both acquisition and maintenance  phases) in sP rats resulted in a significant reduction in striatal CB1  receptor-mediated G-protein coupling whereas alcohol withdrawal attenuated this  effect. 
Alcohol consumption was also associated with markedly increased levels  of endocannabinoids in the striatum. Co-administration of the CB1 receptor  antagonist, rimonabant (SR141716A) reduced alcohol intake, and reversed  alcohol-induced changes in CB1 receptor-mediated G-protein activation. 
These findings provided a new insight into a potential genetic basis of excessive alcohol consumption, suggesting innate differences in the endocannabinoid system might be associated with higher alcohol preference in sP rats.
The data also  indicate a modulation of CB1 receptor-mediated signaling following alcohol  consumption, and further strengthen the potential of the endocannabinoid system  as a target for the treatment of alcohol related behaviors.
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