Exposure of Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) rats to an enriched environment (EE) reduced different aspects of operant alcohol self-administration. The present study was aimed at expanding investigation of the effect of EE exposure upon a model of binge drinking comprised of daily 1-hour drinking sessions with unpredictable access to multiple alcohol concentrations; binge-like alcohol intakes were observed when the drinking session occurred at the last hours of the dark phase of the light/dark cycle. Starting from Postnatal Day (PND) 21, male sP rats were kept under 3 different housing conditions: impoverished environment (IE; single housing with no environmental enrichment); standard environment (SE; 3 rats/cage and no environmental enrichment); EE (6 rats/cage and multiple elements of environmental enrichment). From PND 69, rats were exposed daily to a 1-hour drinking session under the 4-bottle "alcohol (10%, 20%, and 30%, v/v) vs water" choice regimen, during the dark phase, and with timing of alcohol exposure changed each day. In all 3 rat groups (IE, SE, and EE), alcohol intake increased progressively as the drinking session moved from the first to last hours of the dark phase. Slope of regression line was steeper in EE than IE and SE rats, suggestive of higher intakes of alcohol in EE than IE and SE rats when the drinking session occurred over the last hours of the dark phase. These results are discussed hypothesizing that the stressful attributes of alcohol expectation were potentiated by the increased "emotionality" that rats living in a comfortable environment (i.e., EE) may experience when facing new, challenging events or environments. Blood alcohol levels, assessed at the end of a final drinking session occurring at the 12th hour of the dark phase, did not differ among the 3 rat groups and averaged approximately 150 mg%, confirming that this experimental procedure may generate intoxicating levels of alcohol drinking in sP rats.

Environmental enrichment augments binge-like alcohol drinking in Sardinian alcohol-preferring rats

Paola Maccioni;Carla Lobina;Giancarlo Colombo
2022

Abstract

Exposure of Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) rats to an enriched environment (EE) reduced different aspects of operant alcohol self-administration. The present study was aimed at expanding investigation of the effect of EE exposure upon a model of binge drinking comprised of daily 1-hour drinking sessions with unpredictable access to multiple alcohol concentrations; binge-like alcohol intakes were observed when the drinking session occurred at the last hours of the dark phase of the light/dark cycle. Starting from Postnatal Day (PND) 21, male sP rats were kept under 3 different housing conditions: impoverished environment (IE; single housing with no environmental enrichment); standard environment (SE; 3 rats/cage and no environmental enrichment); EE (6 rats/cage and multiple elements of environmental enrichment). From PND 69, rats were exposed daily to a 1-hour drinking session under the 4-bottle "alcohol (10%, 20%, and 30%, v/v) vs water" choice regimen, during the dark phase, and with timing of alcohol exposure changed each day. In all 3 rat groups (IE, SE, and EE), alcohol intake increased progressively as the drinking session moved from the first to last hours of the dark phase. Slope of regression line was steeper in EE than IE and SE rats, suggestive of higher intakes of alcohol in EE than IE and SE rats when the drinking session occurred over the last hours of the dark phase. These results are discussed hypothesizing that the stressful attributes of alcohol expectation were potentiated by the increased "emotionality" that rats living in a comfortable environment (i.e., EE) may experience when facing new, challenging events or environments. Blood alcohol levels, assessed at the end of a final drinking session occurring at the 12th hour of the dark phase, did not differ among the 3 rat groups and averaged approximately 150 mg%, confirming that this experimental procedure may generate intoxicating levels of alcohol drinking in sP rats.
2022
Enriched environment
Experimental model of binge drinking
Limited and unpredictable access to alcohol; Marlau(TM) cage
Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) rats
Time schedule of alcohol drinking
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/415813
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