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Genetic activation of TLR4 in the brain reduced binge drinking. What makes this so interesting is that alcohol consumption itself promotes intestinal permeability, which increases systemic activation of TLR4, potentially resulting in negative cardiovascular outcomes, among other things.

From the article:

One of the study’s most novel findings concerns TLR4’s important role in binge drinking. Science has traditionally considered TLR4 to be an innate immunity receptor involved with neuroinflammation in the brain. Scientists associated TLR4 with microglia, cells that support inflammatory responses in the brain. “What makes this finding particularly important for the field of neuroscience is that we’re showing that TLR4 plays a significant role in neurons, specifically, the neurons that are connected to the GABA receptor,” says Dr. June.

To establish the connection between the GABA receptors, TLR4 and alcohol, the scientists manipulated this pathway in the binge drinking rodents. Dr. Aurelian was a pioneer in developing a method to inhibit gene expression, helping scientists to pinpoint the role of individual genes in the body. […] The scientists found that when they artificially stimulated the GABA receptors and TLR4 in order to simulate the good feelings binge drinkers feel when drinking alcohol, the rats lost interest in alcohol for two weeks after the procedure.

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