Smoking is a well-known risk factor for subsequent alcohol abuse, but the mechanisms underlying this link were unknown, researchers said.
Now, the study conducted on rats found that even a single exposure to nicotine temporarily changes how the brain's reward system responds to alcohol and increases the reinforcing properties of alcohol via stress hormones.
"Our findings indicate the mechanisms by which nicotine influences the neural systems associated with alcohol abuse, providing a foundation for conceptualising strategies aimed at diminishing the link between smoking and later alcohol abuse," said senior author Dr John Dani, of the Baylor College of Medicine in US.
This decreased reward response to alcohol arose via two mechanisms: an initial activation of stress hormone receptors and a subsequent increase in inhibitory signalling in the brain. These processes were responsible for causing the rats to self-administer more alcohol after nicotine exposure.
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"Young people typically experiment with nicotine from tobacco in their teens, and that exposure possibly contributes to a greater vulnerability to alcohol abuse later in life. Therefore, greater vigilance is called for to prevent the initial exposure to nicotine and to follow those at risk," said Dani.
The study was published in the Cell Press journal Neuron.