INVESTIGADORES
PAUTASSI Ricardo Marcos
artículos
Título:
Effects of escalating versus fixed ethanol exposure on ∆FosB expression in the mesocorticolimbic pathway in adolescent and adult rats
Autor/es:
WILLE-BILLE, ARANZA; MARENGO, LEONARDO; GODINO, ANDREA; PAUTASSI, RICARDO MARCOS
Revista:
The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse
Editorial:
Taylor and Francis Ltd
Referencias:
Lugar: New York; Año: 2021 p. 1 - 12
ISSN:
0095-2990
Resumen:
Background: We have reported induction of ∆FosB in adolescent rats that drank less ethanol thanadults yet exhibited a progressive increase in ethanol intake.Objective: To test the hypothesis that an escalating pattern of ethanol exposure is more effective toinduce ∆FosB expression [at prelimbic cortex (PrL), nucleus accumbens core and shell, striatum,basolateral amygdala (BLA) and central amygdala (CeC)] than a pattern equated for number ofexposures yet employing a fixed ethanol dose.Methods: Adolescent and adult (Exp. 1, n = 48) male and female (n = 24 of each sex) or only adultmale (Exp. 2, n = 36) Wistar rats were intermittently intubated with vehicle, escalating (from 0.5 to2.5 g/kg) or fixed (2.0 g/kg) doses of ethanol, across 18 sessions. ∆FosB induction was assessed usingimmunohistochemistry. Ethanol intake, anxiety and risk-taking were assessed (in adults only) viatwo-bottles tests and the multivariate concentric square field.Results: Both patterns heightened ∆FosB levels similarly in adolescents and adults and in males andfemales. Fixed dosing induced ∆FosB in all areas (p < .05) except the CeC, whereas the escalatingpattern induced ∆FosB in the PrL and BLA only (p < .05). Ethanol intake was initially lower in ethanolpre-exposed subjects than in control subjects (p < .05). Rats exposed to the fixed pattern exhibitedenhanced risk-taking behavior (p < .05).Conclusions: The results agree with studies showing ethanol-mediated induction of ∆FosB in rewardareas and indicate that, following ethanol intubations, this induction is similar in adolescents andadults. The induction of ∆FosB seems not necessarily associated with susceptibility for ethanolintake