Juvenile variable stress modulates, in female but not in male Wistar rats, ethanol intake in adulthood

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES Neurotoxicology and teratology Pub Date : 2023-10-04 DOI:10.1016/j.ntt.2023.107306
Agustín Salguero , Agostina Barey , Rodrigo García Virgolini , Victoria Mujica , María Carolina Fabio , Roberto Sebastián Miranda-Morales , Leonardo Marengo , Rosana Camarini , Ricardo Marcos Pautassi
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Abstract

Early stress can increase vulnerability to psychopathological disorders, including substance use disorders. The effects of stress in the juvenile period of the rat, that extends between weaning and the onset of adolescence (equivalent to late human childhood), have received little attention. This study assessed short and long-term behavioral effects of juvenile stress, with a focus on effects on ethanol intake. Male and female Wistar rats were exposed to variable stress (restraint, elevated platform, forced swimming, and social instability) or to restraint stress only, between postnatal days 26 to 29 (PDs 26–29). During adolescence, patterns of anxiety (PD 31) and depression (PD 33), ethanol intake (PDs 36–45) and behavioral sensitivity to the effects of acute stress (PD 47) were evaluated. In adulthood, alcohol ingestion was assessed through two-bottle ethanol intake tests (PDs 75–85). An additional experiment measured blood ethanol levels after a limited access intake session in adolescence. Exposure to juvenile variable stress exerted very mild effects in adolescence, but reduced ethanol ingestion in adulthood, in females only. Ethanol intake during the limited access session was significantly correlated to blood alcohol levels. The results indicate that a schedule of juvenile variable stress that did not significantly alter anxiety-related behaviors induced, nonetheless, sexually dimorphic effects on ethanol intake in adulthood. Early stress exposure that reduced alcohol intake in Wistar rats has been associated with changes on brain opioid and dopamine receptors. These results highlight the impact of early stress exposure on adult female ethanol consumption and its possible underlying neurobiological changes, involving opioid and dopamine receptors.

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幼年可变压力调节成年期雌性Wistar大鼠的乙醇摄入,但雄性Wistar大白鼠没有。
早期的压力会增加患精神病的脆弱性,包括物质使用障碍。压力在大鼠幼年期的影响,从断奶到青春期开始(相当于人类童年晚期),很少受到关注。这项研究评估了青少年压力的短期和长期行为影响,重点是对乙醇摄入的影响。雄性和雌性Wistar大鼠在出生后第26至29天之间暴露于不同的压力(约束、抬高平台、强迫游泳和社会不稳定)或仅暴露于约束压力(PDs 26-29)。在青春期,评估了焦虑(PD 31)和抑郁(PD 33)的模式、乙醇摄入(PD 36-45)和对急性应激影响的行为敏感性(PD 47)。成年后,通过两瓶乙醇摄入测试(PDs 75-85)评估酒精摄入情况。另一项实验测量了青春期有限摄入后的血液乙醇水平。暴露于青少年可变压力在青少年时期产生了非常轻微的影响,但成年后乙醇摄入减少,仅在女性中。在有限访问期间的乙醇摄入量与血液酒精水平显著相关。研究结果表明,青少年可变压力的时间表不会显著改变焦虑相关行为,但会对成年后的乙醇摄入产生性双态影响。Wistar大鼠早期的压力暴露减少了酒精摄入,这与大脑阿片类和多巴胺受体的变化有关。这些结果强调了早期压力暴露对成年女性乙醇消耗的影响及其可能潜在的神经生物学变化,包括阿片类药物和多巴胺受体。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
48
审稿时长
58 days
期刊介绍: Neurotoxicology and Teratology provides a forum for publishing new information regarding the effects of chemical and physical agents on the developing, adult or aging nervous system. In this context, the fields of neurotoxicology and teratology include studies of agent-induced alterations of nervous system function, with a focus on behavioral outcomes and their underlying physiological and neurochemical mechanisms. The Journal publishes original, peer-reviewed Research Reports of experimental, clinical, and epidemiological studies that address the neurotoxicity and/or functional teratology of pesticides, solvents, heavy metals, nanomaterials, organometals, industrial compounds, mixtures, drugs of abuse, pharmaceuticals, animal and plant toxins, atmospheric reaction products, and physical agents such as radiation and noise. These reports include traditional mammalian neurotoxicology experiments, human studies, studies using non-mammalian animal models, and mechanistic studies in vivo or in vitro. Special Issues, Reviews, Commentaries, Meeting Reports, and Symposium Papers provide timely updates on areas that have reached a critical point of synthesis, on aspects of a scientific field undergoing rapid change, or on areas that present special methodological or interpretive problems. Theoretical Articles address concepts and potential mechanisms underlying actions of agents of interest in the nervous system. The Journal also publishes Brief Communications that concisely describe a new method, technique, apparatus, or experimental result.
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