A translational human laboratory Pavlovian conditioning model of individual differences in risk for alcohol cue incentive salience sensitization and longitudinal assessment of problematic alcohol use

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R00 · $248,999 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT This K99/R00 NIH Pathway to Independence Award will provide Dr. Cofresí, trained as a preclinical neuroscientist, with a two-year intensive, mentored training and research experience in translational neuroscience and three-years of research support that will launch his career as an independent investigator. The training and research program focuses on bidirectional translation between preclinical and human laboratory models of neurobehavioral mechanisms that promote alcohol use disorder (AUD). The K99 career development plan will provide training in AUD psychopathology, human alcohol administration, human cognitive/affective neuroscience, and human functional neuroimaging methods. Training will include coursework, conferences, individualized one-on-one mentoring, seminars, and workshops. The K99 research focuses on a neurobehavioral domain of the Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment believed to be critical to the Addiction/AUD Cycle: the attribution of incentive salience (IS) to alcohol cues. Preclinical and human neurobehavioral evidence suggests that repeated alcohol intoxication can sensitize IS attribution to alcohol cues, which may drive the Addiction/AUD Cycle in some individuals. To begin testing this possibility, Dr. Cofresí will translate a preclinical model of individual differences in propensity to attribute IS to reward- predictive cues into a human laboratory model of individual differences in propensity to attribute IS to alcohol intoxication-predictive vs. natural reward-predictive cues, and examine how these individual differences are associated with future problematic alcohol use. Dr. Cofresí’s development will be facilitated by a team with collective expertise spanning the areas of training (Drs. Bruce Bartholow, Shelly Flagel, Brett Froeliger, David Kareken, Denis McCarthy, Ed Merkle, Thomas Piasecki, Kenneth Sher, Todd Schachtman). The K99 phase will take place at the University of Missouri, a world-class research institution, in the Department of Psychological Sciences, home to renowned faculty in alcohol and addiction research with human participants and a premier alcohol research training program (T32-AA013526). The R00 research will take place at a to-be- determined R1 institution, and will focus on continued testing of IS attribution to alcohol-predictive cues and its sensitization in the human laboratory. This K99/R00 award will produce research that advances Goal 1 Objective 1a of the 2017-2021 NIAAA Strategic Plan, which involves identifying behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms underlying AUD, and explaining heterogeneity in how people progress through the Addiction/AUD Cycle, in order to inform the development of AUD prevention and treatment. This K99/R00 award will also produce an independent scientist able and committed to conducting basic behavioral and neurobiological research with human participants that will continue to advance NIAAA’s mission to improve diagnosis, prevention, and tr...

Key facts

NIH application ID
11089117
Project number
4R00AA029169-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-COLUMBIA
Principal Investigator
Roberto U Cofresi
Activity code
R00
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$248,999
Award type
4N
Project period
2024-08-25 → 2027-07-31