Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
Collaborative Neurosciences Graduate Program, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2022 Jul 13;24(8):1177-1185. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntab250.
Co-occurrence of e-cigarette use and alcohol consumption during adolescence is frequent. Here, we examined whether adolescent co-exposure to alcohol drinking and vaporized nicotine would impact reward- and cognition-related behaviors in adult male and female rats during adulthood.
Four groups of male and female Sprague Dawley rats (n = 8-11/group/sex) received either nicotine (JUUL 5% nicotine pods) or vehicle vapor for 10 minutes daily between postnatal days 30-46, while having continuous voluntary access to ethanol and water during this time in a two-bottle preference design. Upon reaching adulthood, all rats underwent behavioral testing (ie, Pavlovian conditioned approach testing, fear conditioning and a two-bottle alcohol preference).
A sex-dependent effect, not related to adolescent nicotine or alcohol exposure, on alcohol drinking in adulthood was found, such that females had a higher intake and preference for alcohol compared to males; both male and female adult rats also had greater alcohol preference compared to their alcohol preference as adolescents. Male rats exposed to vaporized nicotine with or without alcohol drinking during adolescence exhibited altered reward-related learning in adulthood, evidenced by enhanced levels of sign-tracking behavior. Male rats that drank alcohol with or without nicotine vapor in adolescence showed deficits in associative fear learning and memory as adults. In contrast, these effects were not seen in female rats exposed to alcohol and nicotine vapor during adolescence.
The present study provides evidence that co-exposure to alcohol and vaporized nicotine during adolescence in male, but not female, rats produces long-term changes in reward- and cognition-related behaviors.
These findings enhance our understanding of the effects of alcohol drinking and nicotine vapor exposure in adolescence. Moreover, they highlight potential sex differences that exist in the response to alcohol and nicotine vapor, underscoring the need for follow-up studies elucidating the neurobiological mechanisms that drive these sex differences, as well as the long-term effects of alcohol and nicotine vapor use.
青少年同时使用电子烟和饮酒的情况很常见。在此,我们研究了青少年同时暴露于酒精和雾化尼古丁是否会影响成年雄性和雌性大鼠成年后的奖励和认知相关行为。
4 组雄性和雌性 Sprague Dawley 大鼠(n = 8-11/组/性别)在出生后第 30-46 天期间每天接受 10 分钟的尼古丁(JUUL 5%尼古丁弹)或载体雾化,同时在此期间通过双瓶偏好设计持续自由接触乙醇和水。成年后,所有大鼠均接受行为测试(即条件性趋近测试、恐惧条件反射和双瓶酒精偏好)。
发现了一个与青少年尼古丁或酒精暴露无关的、依赖于性别的成年期饮酒作用,即雌性比雄性摄入和偏好酒精更多;成年雄性和雌性大鼠的酒精偏好也比青少年时更高。青春期暴露于雾化尼古丁且有或无饮酒的雄性大鼠表现出成年期奖赏相关学习的改变,表现为标志跟踪行为水平增强。青春期暴露于酒精和尼古丁雾化的雄性大鼠成年后表现出联想性恐惧学习和记忆缺陷。相比之下,在青春期暴露于酒精和尼古丁雾化的雌性大鼠中未观察到这些影响。
本研究提供的证据表明,青春期同时暴露于酒精和雾化尼古丁会导致雄性大鼠而不是雌性大鼠的奖励和认知相关行为发生长期变化。
这些发现增强了我们对青少年期饮酒和尼古丁雾化暴露影响的理解。此外,它们强调了在对酒精和尼古丁雾化的反应中存在潜在的性别差异,这突显了需要进行后续研究以阐明驱动这些性别差异的神经生物学机制,以及酒精和尼古丁雾化使用的长期影响。