Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Department of Neuroscience, Charleston Alcohol Research Center, Charleston, South Carolina.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2019 Sep;43(9):1806-1822. doi: 10.1111/acer.14154. Epub 2019 Aug 14.
The Neurobiology of Adolescent Drinking in Adulthood (NADIA) Consortium has focused on the impact of adolescent binge drinking on brain development, particularly on effects that persist into adulthood. Adolescent binge drinking is common, and while many factors contribute to human brain development and alcohol use during adolescence, animal models are critical for understanding the specific consequences of alcohol exposure during this developmental period and the underlying mechanisms. Using adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE) exposure models, NADIA investigators identified long-lasting AIE-induced changes in adult behavior that are consistent with observations in humans, such as increased alcohol drinking, increased anxiety (particularly social anxiety), increased impulsivity, reduced behavioral flexibility, impaired memory, disrupted sleep, and altered responses to alcohol. These behavioral changes are associated with multiple molecular, cellular, and physiological alterations in the brain that persist long after AIE exposure. At the molecular level, AIE results in long-lasting changes in neuroimmune/trophic factor balance and epigenetic-microRNA (miRNA) signaling across glia and neurons. At the cellular level, AIE history is associated in adulthood with reduced expression of cholinergic, serotonergic, and dopaminergic neuron markers, attenuated cortical thickness, decreased neurogenesis, and altered dendritic spine and glial morphology. This constellation of molecular and cellular adaptations to AIE likely contributes to observed alterations in neurophysiology, measured by synaptic physiology, EEG patterns, and functional connectivity. Many of these AIE-induced brain changes replicate findings seen in postmortem brains of humans with alcohol use disorder (AUD). NADIA researchers are now elucidating mechanisms of these adaptations. Emerging data demonstrate that exercise, antiinflammatory drugs, anticholinesterases, histone deacetylase inhibitors, and other pharmacological compounds are able to prevent (administered during AIE) and/or reverse (given after AIE) AIE-induced pathology in adulthood. These studies support hypotheses that adolescent binge drinking increases risk of adult hazardous drinking and influences brain development, and may provide insight into novel therapeutic targets for AIE-induced neuropathology and AUDs.
青少年期 binge 饮酒对成年后脑发育的影响(NADIA)研究联盟专注于青少年 binge 饮酒对大脑发育的影响,尤其是对持续到成年期的影响。青少年 binge 饮酒很常见,虽然许多因素会影响人类大脑在青少年时期的发育和酒精使用,但动物模型对于理解这一发育阶段酒精暴露的具体后果以及潜在机制至关重要。NADIA 的研究人员使用青少年间歇性乙醇(AIE)暴露模型,发现了 AIE 诱导的成年后行为的持久变化,这些变化与人类的观察结果一致,例如饮酒量增加、焦虑(尤其是社交焦虑)增加、冲动性增加、行为灵活性降低、记忆受损、睡眠中断以及对酒精的反应改变。这些行为变化与大脑中多个分子、细胞和生理变化有关,这些变化在 AIE 暴露后很久仍持续存在。在分子水平上,AIE 导致神经免疫/营养因子平衡和表观遗传-微小 RNA(miRNA)信号在神经胶质和神经元中发生持久变化。在细胞水平上,AIE 史与成年后胆碱能、5-羟色胺能和多巴胺能神经元标志物表达减少、皮质厚度降低、神经发生减少以及树突棘和神经胶质形态改变有关。AIE 引起的这种分子和细胞适应可能导致观察到的神经生理学变化,这些变化通过突触生理学、脑电图模式和功能连接来测量。许多这些 AIE 引起的大脑变化复制了在患有酒精使用障碍(AUD)的人类死后大脑中观察到的发现。NADIA 的研究人员正在阐明这些适应的机制。新兴数据表明,运动、抗炎药物、乙酰胆碱酯酶抑制剂、组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂和其他药理学化合物能够预防(在 AIE 期间给予)和/或逆转(在 AIE 后给予)成年期的 AIE 诱导的病理学。这些研究支持了青少年 binge 饮酒会增加成年期危险饮酒的风险并影响大脑发育的假设,并可能为 AIE 诱导的神经病理学和 AUD 提供新的治疗靶点。