Literature DB >> 30664887

Individual differences in voluntary alcohol consumption are associated with conditioned fear in the fear incubation model.

Alisa Pajser1, Aaron Limoges1, Charday Long1, Charles L Pickens2.   

Abstract

Previous research in male Long Evans rats has shown a relationship between low voluntary alcohol consumption and high conditioned fear after a single training session. Here, we determined whether chronic intermittent access (CIA) to alcohol during adolescence/early adulthood or during adulthood would alter or be associated with auditory-cued conditioned fear levels using an extended training fear incubation procedure. This training procedure leads to low fear soon after training that grows over one month. Rats received 6 weeks of CIA to 20% alcohol or water from PND 26-66. Ten or eleven days later, the rats began behavioral testing that included 10 sessions of tone-shock pairings. Rats then received 4 weeks of CIA exposure during the 1-month fear incubation period and were tested for conditioned fear 6 days after the end of alcohol access. We found no evidence that voluntary alcohol consumption during adolescence/early adulthood or adulthood altered fear expression. However, we found that rats that consumed more alcohol during early adulthood (PND 54-66) had lower fear than low-consumption rats on day 1 of conditioned fear training and in the day 2 and 1-month tests. This extends associations we previously found between individual differences in alcohol consumption and conditioned fear to a different fear conditioning procedure. Combined with our previous data that show that the rate of instrumental extinction is associated with both alcohol consumption and conditioned fear, these data provide further support for the generality and reliability of a pair of phenotypes that encompass a wide variety of learning traits.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alcohol; Fear conditioning; Incubation; Individual differences

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30664887      PMCID: PMC6415663          DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2019.01.027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


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