Department of Anesthesiology and
Department of Anesthesiology and.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jul 4;38(27):6207-6222. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0550-18.2018. Epub 2018 Jun 18.
Periodic episodes of excessive alcohol consumption ("binge drinking") occur frequently among adolescents, and early binge drinking is associated with an increased risk of alcohol use disorders later in life. The PFC undergoes significant development during adolescence and hence may be especially susceptible to the effects of binge drinking. In humans and in animal models, adolescent alcohol exposure is known to alter PFC neuronal activity and produce deficits in PFC-dependent behaviors, such as decision making, response inhibition, and working memory. Using a voluntary intermittent access to alcohol (IA EtOH) procedure in male mice, we demonstrate that binge-level alcohol consumption during adolescence leads to altered drinking patterns and working memory deficits in young adulthood, two outcomes that suggest medial PFC dysfunction. We recorded from pyramidal neurons (PNs) in the prelimbic subregion of the medial PFC in slices obtained from mice that had IA EtOH and found that they display altered excitability, including a hyperpolarization of the resting membrane potential and reductions in the hyperpolarization-activated cation current (I) and in intrinsic persistent activity (a mode of neuronal firing that is dependent on I). Many of these effects on intrinsic excitability were sustained following abstinence and observed in mice that showed working memory deficits. In addition, we found that resting membrane potential and the I-dependent voltage "sag" in prelimbic PFC PNs are developmentally regulated during adolescence, suggesting that adolescent alcohol exposure may compromise PFC function by arresting the normal developmental trajectory of PN intrinsic excitability. Binge alcohol drinking during adolescence has negative consequences for the function of the developing PFC. Using a mouse model of voluntary binge drinking during adolescence, we found that this behavior leads to working memory deficits and altered drinking behavior in adulthood. In addition, we found that adolescent drinking is associated with specific changes to the intrinsic excitability of pyramidal neurons in the PFC, reducing the ability of these neurons to generate intrinsic persistent activity, a phenomenon thought to be important for working memory. These findings may help explain why human adolescent binge drinkers show performance deficits on tasks mediated by the PFC.
青少年经常出现周期性的过度饮酒(“ binge drinking ”)现象,早期 binge drinking 与日后发生酒精使用障碍的风险增加有关。前额叶皮层在青少年时期经历了显著的发展,因此可能特别容易受到 binge drinking 的影响。在人类和动物模型中,青春期酒精暴露已知会改变前额叶皮层神经元的活动,并导致与前额叶皮层依赖的行为相关的缺陷,例如决策、反应抑制和工作记忆。我们使用雄性小鼠的自愿间歇性酒精摄入(IA EtOH)程序,证明青春期 binge-level 酒精摄入会导致成年早期改变的饮酒模式和工作记忆缺陷,这两个结果表明内侧前额叶皮层功能障碍。我们从获得 IA EtOH 的小鼠的前额叶皮层前扣带回亚区切片中记录了锥体神经元(PNs)的活动,发现它们表现出改变的兴奋性,包括静息膜电位的超极化以及超极化激活阳离子电流(I)和内在持续活动(一种依赖于 I 的神经元放电模式)的减少。这些内在兴奋性的许多影响在禁欲后仍然存在,并且在表现出工作记忆缺陷的小鼠中观察到。此外,我们发现,在青春期期间,前扣带回皮层 PNs 的静息膜电位和 I 依赖性电压“凹陷”受到发育调控,这表明青春期酒精暴露可能通过阻止 PN 内在兴奋性的正常发育轨迹来损害 PFC 功能。青少年时期 binge 饮酒对发育中 PFC 的功能有负面影响。使用青春期自愿 binge 饮酒的小鼠模型,我们发现这种行为会导致成年期的工作记忆缺陷和改变的饮酒行为。此外,我们发现青少年饮酒与前额叶皮层中锥体神经元的内在兴奋性的特定变化有关,降低了这些神经元产生内在持续活动的能力,这一现象被认为对工作记忆很重要。这些发现可能有助于解释为什么人类青少年 binge 饮酒者在由 PFC 介导的任务中表现出缺陷。