To determine genetic differences in voluntary morphine consumption, 15
commonly used inbred strains of mice were given ad libitum two-bottle
choice between saccharin alone or saccharin/morphine in one bottle an
d water in the other bottle. Subsequently, the saccharin was gradually
reduced to zero, leaving only morphine. Independent groups of mice of
the same strains were exposed to quinine in a parallel manner to cont
rol for the bitter alkaloid taste of morphine. Of the 15 strains, the
C57BL/6J strain showed the highest consumption of morphine, both with
or without saccharin and greatest consumption of morphine relative to
quinine; it also showed only a slight decline in fluid consumption whe
n morphine was added to the saccharin bottle. In marked contrast, the
SWR/J strain showed the least consumption of morphine by the same crit
eria, followed closely by the AKR/J, CE/J, DBA/2J and SJL/J strains. T
he strain differences for all the morphine drinking measures exceeded
an order of magnitude. Strain-specific voluntary morphine/saccharin co
nsumption was not significantly correlated with saccharin consumption
alone, but was highly correlated with morphine consumption alone. The
results show that these behaviors are under an unusually large degree
of genetic determination, and some of the largest strain differences r
emained essentially the same regardless of whether saccharin was prese
nt, or whether quinine was used as a control tastant.