4.7 Article

Adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE) produces sex specific alterations in adult neuroimmune gene expression and ethanol sensitivity that are independent of ethanol metabolism

Journal

NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 195, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2021.108635

Keywords

Rat; Cytokine; Development; Neuroimmune; Adolescent ethanol exposure; Pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P50AA017823, T32AA025606, F31AA027959]

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The present studies demonstrate that adolescent intermittent ethanol exposure has long-lasting effects on adult ethanol sensitivity and neuroimmune gene expression, with significant differences between sexes.
The goal of the present studies was to determine long-lasting effects of adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE), a rodent model of binge patterns of ethanol consumption, on (i) behavioral sensitivity to ethanol challenge in adulthood using the Loss of Righting Reflex (LORR) test; (ii) ethanol pharmacokinetics and ethanol-metabolizing enzyme expression when re-challenged with ethanol as adults; and (iii) induction of neuroimmune gene expression during an adult binge-like ethanol challenge. To evaluate the impact of AIE on ethanol sensitivity in adulthood, adult rats received a sedative ethanol dose of 3.5 g/kg and were tested for the LORR. Sexually dimorphic effects were observed, with AIE males showing more rapid recovery than vehicle exposed controls, an effect that was completely absent in females. Rats exposed to the same AIE procedure were challenged with 0.75, 1.5, or 3.0 g/kg i.p. ethanol in adulthood. Female rats with a history of AIE displayed a small increase in ethanol clearance rate when challenged with 0.75 g/kg, however no other significant differences in ethanol pharmacokinetics were noted. To assess persistent AIE-associated changes in neuroimmune gene expression, rats were challenged with 0 or 2.5 g/kg ethanol. Both male and female adult rats with a history of AIE displayed sensitized hippocampal IL-6 and I kappa B alpha gene expression in response to ethanol challenge. Changes in cytokine gene expression as well as ethanol sensitivity assessed by LORR were not shown to be the result of changes in ethanol pharmacokinetics and point to AIE altering other mechanisms capable of significantly altering the neuroimmune and behavioral response to ethanol.

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