4.5 Article

Adolescent Alcohol Exposure Produces Protracted Cognitive-Behavioral Impairments in Adult Male and Female Rats

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci10110785

Keywords

ethanol; working memory; sex differences; development; learning; memory; spatial navigation; dominance; perseveration; aggression

Categories

Funding

  1. Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies
  2. NIAAA Research Service Award [T32 AA007573]
  3. Neurobiology of Adolescent Drinking in Adulthood (NADIA) consortium [U01 AA020023, U24 AA020024]
  4. NIAAA Alcohol Research Center (ARC) [P60 AA011605]

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Binge drinking is common in adolescence. Rodent studies modeling adolescent binge drinking find persistent effects on the brain's physiology, including increased expression of neuroimmune genes, impaired neurogenesis, and changes in behavioral flexibility. This study used females and males to investigate the effects of adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE) on a battery of behaviors assessing spatial navigation using a radial arm water maze, working memory using the Hebb-Williams maze, non-spatial long-term memory using novel object recognition, and dominance using a tube dominance test. Results indicate that AIE impairs adult acquisition in spatial navigational learning with deficits predominantly driven by females. Surprisingly, AIE slowed the transition from random to serial search strategies in both sexes, suggesting AIE impairs flexibility in problem-solving processing. In the Hebb-Williams maze working memory task, adult AIE rats exhibited deficits in problem solving, resulting in more errors across the 12 maze configurations, independent of sex. Conversely, AIE decreased dominance behaviors in female rats, and at 7 months post-alcohol, female AIE rats continued to exhibit deficits in novel object recognition. These results suggest that cognitive-behavioral alterations after adolescent binge drinking persist well into middle age, despite abstinence. Future studies should focus on intervening treatment strategies in both females and males.

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