Allan Andrea M, Chynoweth Julie, Tyler Lani A, Caldwell Kevin K
Department of Neurosciences, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque 87131-0002, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2003 Dec;27(12):2009-16. doi: 10.1097/01.ALC.0000100940.95053.72.
The incidence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders is estimated to be as high as 1 in 100 births. Efforts to better understand the basis of prenatal ethanol-induced impairments in brain functioning, and the mechanisms by which ethanol produces these defects, will rely on the use of animal models of fetal alcohol exposure (FAE).
Using a saccharin-sweetened alcohol solution, we developed a free-choice, moderate alcohol access model of prenatal alcohol exposure. Stable drinking of a saccharin solution (0.066%) was established in female mice. Ethanol then was added to the saccharin in increasing concentrations (2%, 5%, 10% w/v) every 2 days. Water was always available, and mice consumed standard pellet chow. Control mice drank saccharin solution without ethanol. After a stable baseline of ethanol consumption (14 g/kg/day) was obtained, females were impregnated. Ethanol consumption continued throughout pregnancy and then was decreased to 0% in a step-wise fashion over a period of 6 days after pups were delivered. Characterization of the model included measurements of maternal drinking patterns, blood alcohol levels, food consumption, litter size, pup weight, pup retrieval times for the dams, and effects of FAE on performance in fear-conditioned learning and novelty exploration.
Maternal food consumption, maternal care, and litter size and number were all found to be similar for the alcohol-exposed and saccharin control animals. FAE did not alter locomotor activity in an open field but did increase the time spent inspecting a novel object introduced into the open field. FAE mice displayed reduced contextual fear when trained using a delay fear conditioning procedure.
The mouse model should be a useful tool in testing hypotheses about the neural mechanisms underlying the learning deficits present in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. Moreover, a mouse prenatal ethanol model should increase the opportunity to use the power of genetically defined and genetically altered mouse populations.
胎儿酒精谱系障碍的发病率估计高达每100例出生中就有1例。为了更好地理解产前乙醇诱导的脑功能损害的基础以及乙醇产生这些缺陷的机制,将依赖于使用胎儿酒精暴露(FAE)动物模型。
我们使用一种糖精加甜的酒精溶液,开发了一种自由选择、适度饮酒的产前酒精暴露模型。在雌性小鼠中建立了对糖精溶液(0.066%)的稳定饮用。然后每2天以递增浓度(2%、5%、10% w/v)将乙醇添加到糖精中。水始终可用,小鼠食用标准颗粒饲料。对照小鼠饮用不含乙醇的糖精溶液。在获得稳定的乙醇消耗基线(14 g/kg/天)后,雌性小鼠受孕。整个孕期持续摄入乙醇,幼崽出生后6天内逐步降至0%。该模型的特征包括测量母体饮酒模式、血液酒精水平、食物消耗、窝仔数、幼崽体重、母鼠找回幼崽的时间,以及胎儿酒精暴露对恐惧条件学习和新奇探索表现的影响。
发现酒精暴露组和糖精对照组动物的母体食物消耗、母性关怀以及窝仔数和数量均相似。胎儿酒精暴露在旷场试验中未改变运动活动,但增加了检查引入旷场的新物体的时间。使用延迟恐惧条件训练程序时,胎儿酒精暴露小鼠表现出情境恐惧降低。
该小鼠模型应是检验关于胎儿酒精谱系障碍中存在的学习缺陷潜在神经机制假说的有用工具。此外,小鼠产前乙醇模型应增加利用基因定义和基因改变小鼠群体优势的机会。