Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology Substance Abuse
Background
Alcohol use disorders are characterized by inflexible alcohol seeking that occurs despite adverse consequences. Males and females are differentially sensitive to ethanol (EtOH) reward, but it is unclear whether sex differences in EtOH seeking under reward-aversion conflict are present.
Methods
To investigate sex differences in EtOH seeking under conflict, adult male and female C57BL/6J mice underwent chronic intermittent EtOH (CIE) exposure by vapor inhalation or served as air-exposed controls. After CIE, mice were trained in a modified EtOH conditioned place preference paradigm. During 3 conditioning sessions, 2 g/kg EtOH was administered prior to confinement in the "EtOH-paired" chamber. On alternating days, saline was injected prior to confinement in the "saline-paired" chamber. After conditioning, mice experienced a footshock in the EtOH-paired chamber. EtOH-seeking behavior was assessed before and after footshock.
Results
Control and CIE-exposed males reduced the time spent in and increased latency to enter the reward-paired chamber following footshock. Control females did not alter EtOH-seeking behavior following footshock. CIE-exposed females spent more time in the EtOH-paired chamber at baseline. However, following a footshock, CIE-exposed females significantly reduced the time spent in and increased latency to enter the EtOH-paired chamber.
Conclusions
Nondependent female mice exhibited aversion-resistant alcohol seeking to a greater degree than males. Chronic EtOH exposure did not impact EtOH seeking in males. In females, CIE enhanced EtOH seeking in the absence of conflict, but reduced EtOH seeking after an aversive experience. While these sex-specific effects of CIE are not present when reward seeking is assessed in the absence of an aversive experience, multiple factors may underlie the differences in reward seeking despite adverse consequences, including reward- and aversion-related learning and decision making under conflict. These data highlight the importance of considering sex as a variable influencing EtOH seeking and provide a greater understanding of how sex interacts with EtOH exposure to alter behavior.
Sex Differences in Ethanol Reward Seeking Under Conflict in Mice
Creators
Qiaowei Xie - Drexel University
Lauren A. Buck - Drexel University
Kathleen G. Bryant - Drexel University
Jacqueline M. Barker - Drexel University
Publication Details
Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, v 43(7), pp 1556-1566
Publisher
Wiley
Number of pages
11
Grant note
China Scholarship Council
R00AA024499 / NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM; United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA; NIH National Institute on Alcohol Abuse & Alcoholism (NIAAA)
R00AA024499 / NIH; United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA
Drexel University College of Medicine
Resource Type
Journal article
Language
English
Academic Unit
Neurobiology and Anatomy; Pharmacology and Physiology
Web of Science ID
WOS:000474289900022
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85066030392
Other Identifier
991019168058404721
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