Stony Brook University, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, New York, 11794, United States.
Stony Brook University, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, New York, 11794, United States.
Alcohol. 2021 May;92:65-72. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.01.009. Epub 2021 Mar 13.
Research suggests that addictive traits are indeed heritable, but very few preclinical studies have explored transgenerational effects of paternal alcohol exposure. The present study addressed this gap in knowledge. We explored whether offspring of ethanol-exposed sires would be more likely to accept ethanol than descendants of water-exposed and control sires. We also investigated whether the second generation of ethanol-exposed descendants would accept ethanol more than controls and were more or less likely to experience anxiety-like behavior in behavioral assessments. We exposed male rats to repeated binge doses of alcohol (4 g/kg/day across 8 days), water, or left them untreated and mated them with untreated females. We then bred the offspring of these rats to test transgenerational effects of paternal alcohol exposure. We tested 14-day-old offspring from the first and second filial generation for their acceptance of ethanol and water, and measured anxiety-like behavior in 38-day-old, second-generation offspring using an elevated plus maze. The results indicate that offspring of ethanol-exposed sires increase ethanol acceptance in the first generation compared to untreated controls, whereas in the second-generation increased ethanol acceptance vs. these controls is seen in descendants of both ethanol- and vehicle-treated sires. At adolescence, the second generation of rats derived from alcohol-exposed sires exhibited significantly more time spent in the open arms and significantly more arm entries than any other group. The present study suggests that parental ethanol exposure is associated with lingering effects in the infant and adolescent offspring. The second filial generation was also found to be affected, albeit similarly by grandparental ethanol exposure or by the stress of the vehicle administration.
研究表明,成瘾特征确实具有遗传性,但很少有临床前研究探索父代酒精暴露的跨代效应。本研究填补了这一知识空白。我们探讨了乙醇暴露的亲代雄性大鼠的后代是否比水暴露和对照亲代雄性大鼠的后代更有可能接受乙醇,以及乙醇暴露的第二代后代是否比对照组更有可能接受乙醇,以及在行为评估中是否更有可能或更不可能出现类似焦虑的行为。我们使雄性大鼠反复接受 binge 剂量的酒精(8 天内每天 4g/kg)、水或不接受任何处理,并让它们与未经处理的雌性大鼠交配。然后,我们繁殖这些大鼠的后代,以测试父代酒精暴露的跨代效应。我们测试了第一代和第二代子代在 14 天时对乙醇和水的接受程度,并在 38 天时使用高架十字迷宫测量第二代子代的类似焦虑行为。结果表明,与未经处理的对照组相比,乙醇暴露亲代雄性大鼠的后代在第一代中增加了对乙醇的接受度,而在第二代中,乙醇和对照处理的亲代雄性大鼠的后代都增加了对乙醇的接受度。在青春期,来自酒精暴露亲代雄性大鼠的第二代大鼠在开放臂上花费的时间明显更多,进入臂的次数也明显多于任何其他组。本研究表明,亲代酒精暴露与婴儿和青少年后代的持续影响有关。第二代也受到影响,尽管同样受到祖代酒精暴露或药物处理压力的影响。