4.5 Article

Chronic social instability increases anxiety-like behavior and ethanol preference in male Long Evans rats

期刊

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
卷 173, 期 -, 页码 179-187

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2017.02.010

关键词

Sex differences; Chronic stress; Corticosterone; Adolescence; Female

资金

  1. University of Dayton
  2. University of Dayton Research Council Seed Grant
  3. University of Dayton College of Arts & Sciences Summer Dean's Fellowship funding
  4. University of Dayton Honors Program funding

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Chronic stress during adolescence is related to increased prevalence of anxiety disorders and alcohol use disorders in humans. This phenotype has been consistently recapitulated in animal models with male subjects, but models using female subjects are fewer. The aim of these studies was to test the hypothesis that Chronic social instability (CSI) during adolescence engenders increased anxiety-like behavior, increased corticosterone, and greater ethanol intake and/or preference than control groups in male and fernale rats. A chronic social instability (CSI) procedure was conducted in separate cohorts of female and male adolescent Long Evans rats. CSI included daily social isolation for 1 h, and then pair housing with a novel cage mate for 23 h until the next 1 h isolation period from PND 30-46. Control groups included social stability (SS), chronic isolation (ISO), and acute social instability (aSI). At PND 49-50, anxiety-like behavior was assessed on the elevated plus maze, and on PND 51 tails bloods were obtained for determination of corficosterone (CORT) levels. This Was followed by 4 weeks of ethanol drinking in a home cage intermittent access ethanol drinking paradigm (PND 55-81 for males, PND 57-83 for females). Planned contrast testing showed that the male CSI group had greater anxiety-like behavior compared controls, but group differences were not apparent for CORT. CSI males had significantly higher levels of ethanol preference during drinking weeks 2-3 compared to all other groups and compared to SS and ISO groups in week 4. For the female cohort, we did not observe consistent group differences in anxiety-like behavior, CORT levels were unexpectedly lower in the ISO group only compared to the other groups, and group differences were not apparent for ethanol intake/preference. In conclusion, chronic stress during adolescence in the form of social instability increases anxiety-like behavior and ethanol preference in male rats, consistent with other models of chronic stress during adolescence. Conversely, and contrary to our hypothesis, female rats' anxiety like behavior, CORT level, and ethanol intake/preference were not altered by CSI. New paradigms must continue to be explored for study of clinically relevant relationships in female preclinical models. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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