| Literature DB >> 29752970 |
Luanna M P Fernandes1, Sabrina C Cartágenes1, Mayara A Barros1, Taiana C V S Carvalheiro1, Nair C F Castro1, Marissa G Schamne2, Rafael R Lima3, Rui D Prediger2, Marta C Monteiro4, Enéas A Fontes-Júnior1, Rodrigo A Cunha5, Cristiane S F Maia6.
Abstract
Binge-like ethanol intake (BEI) is a socioeconomical problem among adolescents and increasingly affects women. BEI can leave a long-term imprint in the brain, but it is unknown if its effect on cognition and anxiety is cumulative on repeated binge-ethanol episodes. We now submitted female Wistar rats to repeated cycles of binge-like ethanol treatment by intragastrically administering ethanol (3.0 g/kg/day, 20% w/v ethanol; 3 days on/4 days off) starting at postnatal day 35 (PND35). To investigate the short-term effects of BEI during adolescence, rats underwent 1 or 4 cycles of BEI, being evaluated at PND37 and PND58, respectively: both groups displayed anxiety-like behavior in the open field and elevated plus-maze tests, as well as short-term memory deficits in the object recognition task; this was associated with transient decreases of BDNF levels and increases of GFAP levels in the hippocampus. To evaluate the short- and long-lasting effects of BEI in adulthood, rats were subjected to 8 cycles of BEI and evaluated after 7.5 h (PND86) or after 14 days of ethanol withdrawal (PND100). This caused a persistent anxiogenic profile whereas recognition memory was impaired on the short-term, but not 14 days post-administration. The reduced BDNF level observed shortly after BEI recovered upon withdrawal, whereas increased GFAP immunoreactivity was persistent up to 14 days post-administration in adulthood. These findings show that repeated binge-like ethanol episodes from adolescence to adulthood in female rats cause consistent and long-term alterations of anxiety and hippocampal astrogliosis, whereas they trigger a recognition memory deficit paralleled by lower hippocampal BDNF levels, both recovering upon ethanol withdrawal.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Anxiety; Astrogliosis; BDNF; Binge drinking; Cognition
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29752970 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2018.05.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332