An orbitocortical-thalamic circuit suppresses binge alcohol-drinking

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The study investigated whether an endogenous inhibitory mechanism in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) regulates binge alcohol drinking, using experiments that identified a discrete GABAergic neuronal ensemble selectively recruited during binge alcohol-drinking and intoxication. The authors found that alcohol intoxication activates this ensemble to suppress binge drinking behavior, while optogenetic silencing or ablation of the population causes uncontrolled binge alcohol consumption. They report that the ensemble is alcohol-specific rather than recruited by other rewarding substances, and that brain-wide analyses implicate projections to the mediodorsal thalamus as responsible for regulating drinking. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Summary Alcohol consumption remains a significant global health challenge, causing millions of direct and indirect deaths annually. Intriguingly, recent work has highlighted the prefrontal cortex, a major brain area that regulates inhibitory control of behaviors, whose activity becomes dysregulated upon alcohol abuse. However, whether an endogenous mechanism exists within this brain area that limits alcohol consumption is unknown. Here we identify a discrete GABAergic neuronal ensemble in the medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC) that is selectively recruited during binge alcohol-drinking and intoxication. Upon alcohol intoxication, this neuronal ensemble suppresses binge drinking behavior. Optogenetically silencing of this population, or its ablation, results in uncontrolled binge alcohol consumption. We find that this neuronal ensemble is specific to alcohol and is not recruited by other rewarding substances. We further show, using brain-wide analysis, that this neuronal ensemble projects widely, and that its projections specifically to the mediodorsal thalamus are responsible for regulating binge alcohol drinking. Together, these results identify a brain circuit in the mOFC that serves to protect against binge drinking by halting alcohol intake. These results provide valuable insights into the complex nature of alcohol abuse and offers potential avenues for the development of mOFC neuronal ensemble-targeted interventions. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00