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Environmental stressors influence limited-access ethanol consumption by C57BL/6J mice in a sex-dependent manner

机译:环境应激因素以性别依赖性的方式影响C57BL / 6J小鼠的受限乙醇摄入

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Exposure to stress contributes to ethanol consumption in humans, but it produces inconsistent effects on ethanol drinking in rodent models. Therefore, the present study examined the influence of different stressors (restraint, tail suspension, predator odor, foot shock, and tail pinch) on 2-h access to water and 10% ethanol by male and female C57BL/6J mice and determined whether there were sex-dependent differences in response to stress. Plasma corticosterone (CORT) and allopregnanolone (ALLO) were assessed as indexes of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity and of endogenous neurosteroid levels, respectively, following restraint, tail suspension, and predator odor. These stressors increased plasma CORT and ALLO levels, and produced a greater increase in CORT and ALLO levels in females versus males. Ethanol intake was decreased following restraint, tail suspension, foot shock, and tail pinch in both sexes, with stressor-related differences in the duration of the suppression. Predator odor significantly increased ethanol intake on the following two days in females and on the second day after stress in males. Notably, there was a significant positive correlation between CORT levels immediately after predator odor stress and ethanol intake on the following day. In summary, the type of stressor influenced ethanol consumption, with subtle sex differences in the magnitude and persistence of the effect. These findings are the first to demonstrate that a single, acute exposure to restraint, tail suspension, and predator odor stress increased plasma CORT and ALLO levels in animals with a history of ethanol consumption and that female mice were more responsive than males to the ability of stress to increase CORT and ALLO levels as well as to increase ethanol intake following predator odor stress. Because predator odor stress is a model of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the present sex differences have important implications for preclinical studies modeling the comorbidity of FTSD and alcohol use disorders. Published by Elsevier Inc.
机译:暴露于压力下会导致人类消耗乙醇,但是在啮齿动物模型中,乙醇摄入会产生不一致的影响。因此,本研究调查了不同压力源(约束力,尾巴悬吊,捕食者的气味,足部震动和尾巴挤压)对雄性和雌性C57BL / 6J小鼠2小时接触水和10%乙醇的影响,并确定是否存在是对压力的性别依赖性差异。约束,尾部悬吊和捕食者气味后,分别将血浆皮质酮(CORT)和去甲肾上腺素(ALLO)分别作为下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴活性和内源性神经甾体水平的指标。这些压力增加了血浆CORT和ALLO水平,并且使女性相对于男性的CORT和ALLO水平增加了更多。约束,尾部悬吊,脚部震动和尾巴捏合后,男女的乙醇摄入量减少,并且抑制持续时间与压力源相关。捕食者的气味在雌性的后两天和雄性应激后的第二天显着增加了乙醇的摄入。值得注意的是,捕食者发出异味后第二天的CORT水平与乙醇摄入量之间存在显着的正相关。总之,压力源的类型影响了乙醇的消耗,其影响的大小和持续性存在细微的性别差异。这些发现是第一个证明单次急性暴露于约束,尾巴悬吊和捕食者的气味应激会增加具有乙醇消耗史的动物的血浆CORT和ALLO水平,并且雌性小鼠对雄性小鼠的抵抗力要强于雄性。捕食者闻到气味后,压力会增加CORT和ALLO含量,并增加乙醇的摄入量。由于捕食者的气味应激是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的模型,所以目前的性别差异对模拟FTSD和酒精使用障碍合并症的临床前研究具有重要意义。由Elsevier Inc.发布

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