Neurobiology Curriculum, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Thurston-Bowles Building, CB #7178, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States.
Behav Brain Res. 2012 Apr 21;230(1):158-66. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2012.02.010. Epub 2012 Feb 13.
Adolescence is a critical period of brain development that is accompanied by increased probability of risky behavior, such as alcohol use. Emerging research indicates that adolescents are differentially sensitive to the behavioral effects of acute ethanol as compared to adults but the neurobiological mechanisms of this effect remain to be fully elucidated. This study was designed to evaluate effects of acute ethanol on extracellular signal-regulated kinase phosphorylation (p-ERK1/2) in mesocorticolimbic brain regions. We also sought to determine if age-specific effects of ethanol on p-ERK1/2 are associated with ethanol-induced behavioral deficits on acquisition of the hippocampal-dependent novel object recognition (NOR) test. Adolescent and adult C57BL/6J mice were administered acute ethanol (0 0.5, 1, or 3g/kg, i.p.). Brains were removed 30-min post injection and processed for analysis of p-ERK1/2 immunoreactivity (IR). Additional groups of mice were administered ethanol (0 or 1g/kg) prior to the NOR test. Analysis of p-ERK1/2 IR showed that untreated adolescent mice had significantly higher levels of p-ERK1/2 IR in the nucleus accumbens shell, basolateral amygdala (BLA), central amygdala (CeA), and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) as compared to adults. Ethanol (1g/kg) selectively reduced p-ERK1/2 IR in the dentate gyrus and increased p-ERK1/2 IR in the BLA only in adolescent mice. Ethanol (3g/kg) produced the same effects on p-ERK1/2 IR in both age groups with increases in CeA and mPFC, but a decrease in the dentate gyrus, as compared to age-matched saline controls. Pretreatment with ethanol (1g/kg) disrupted performance on the NOR test specifically in adolescents, which corresponds with the ethanol-induced inhibition of p-ERK1/2 IR in the hippocampus. These data show that adolescent mice have differential expression of basal p-ERK1/2 IR in mesocorticolimbic brain regions. Acute ethanol produces a unique set of changes in ERK1/2 phosphorylation in the adolescent brain that are associated with disruption of hippocampal-dependent memory acquisition.
青春期是大脑发育的关键时期,伴随着风险行为(如饮酒)的可能性增加。新兴研究表明,与成年人相比,青少年对急性乙醇的行为影响更为敏感,但这种影响的神经生物学机制仍有待充分阐明。本研究旨在评估急性乙醇对中脑边缘系统脑区细胞外信号调节激酶磷酸化(p-ERK1/2)的影响。我们还试图确定乙醇对 p-ERK1/2 的年龄特异性影响是否与乙醇诱导的海马依赖性新物体识别(NOR)测试获得的行为缺陷有关。给予青春期和成年 C57BL/6J 小鼠急性乙醇(0、0.5、1 或 3g/kg,腹腔注射)。注射后 30 分钟取出大脑,用于分析 p-ERK1/2 免疫反应性(IR)。另外一些小鼠在 NOR 测试前给予乙醇(0 或 1g/kg)。分析 p-ERK1/2 IR 显示,未经处理的青春期小鼠的伏隔核壳、外侧杏仁核(BLA)、中央杏仁核(CeA)和内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)中的 p-ERK1/2 IR 水平明显高于成年小鼠。乙醇(1g/kg)选择性降低了仅在青少年小鼠中齿状回和增加了 BLA 中的 p-ERK1/2 IR。与年龄匹配的盐水对照组相比,乙醇(3g/kg)在两个年龄组中对 p-ERK1/2 IR 产生相同的影响,增加了 CeA 和 mPFC,但减少了齿状回。与年龄匹配的盐水对照组相比,乙醇(1g/kg)预处理破坏了青少年的 NOR 测试表现,这与乙醇诱导的海马 p-ERK1/2 IR 抑制相对应。这些数据表明,青春期小鼠中脑边缘系统脑区中存在基础 p-ERK1/2 IR 的差异表达。急性乙醇在青少年大脑中产生一组独特的 ERK1/2 磷酸化变化,与海马依赖性记忆获得的破坏有关。