INVESTIGADORES
MIRANDA MORALES Roberto Sebastian
artículos
Título:
Juvenile variable stress modulates, in female but not in male Wistar rats, ethanol intake in adulthood
Autor/es:
SALGUERO, AGUSTÍN; BAREY, AGOSTINA; VIRGOLINI, RODRIGO GARCÍA; MUJICA, VICTORIA; FABIO, MARÍA CAROLINA; MIRANDA-MORALES, ROBERTO SEBASTIÁN; MARENGO, LEONARDO; CAMARINI, ROSANA; PAUTASSI, RICARDO MARCOS
Revista:
NEUROTOXICOLOGY AND TERATOLOGY.
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2023 vol. 100
ISSN:
0892-0362
Resumen:
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.