Petersen Nicholas, Adank Danielle N, Quan Yizhen, Edwards Caitlyn M, Taylor Anne, Winder Danny G, Doyle Marie A
Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, 37232.
Vanderbilt Center for Addiction Research, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, 37232.
bioRxiv. 2024 May 23:2024.05.22.595186. doi: 10.1101/2024.05.22.595186.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a significant global health issue. Despite historically higher rates among men, AUD prevalence and negative alcohol-related outcomes in women are rising. Loneliness in humans has been associated with increased alcohol use, and traditional rodent drinking models involve single housing, presenting challenges for studying social enrichment. We developed LIQ PARTI (Lick Instance Quantifier with Poly-Animal RFID Tracking Integration), an open-source tool to examine home cage continuous access two-bottle choice drinking behavior in a group-housed setting, investigating the influence of sex and social isolation on ethanol consumption and bout microstructure in C57Bl/6J mice. LIQ PARTI, based on our previously developed single-housed LIQ HD system, accurately tracks drinking behavior using capacitive-based sensors and RFID technology. Group-housed female mice exhibited higher ethanol preference than males, while males displayed a unique undulating pattern of ethanol preference linked to cage changes, suggesting a potential stress-related response. Chronic ethanol intake distinctly altered bout microstructure between male and female mice, highlighting sex and social environmental influences on drinking behavior. Social isolation with the LIQ HD system amplified fluid intake and ethanol preference in both sexes, accompanied by sex- and fluid-dependent changes in bout microstructure. However, these effects largely reversed upon resocialization, indicating the plasticity of these behaviors in response to social context. Utilizing a novel group-housed home cage lickometer device, our findings illustrate the critical interplay of sex and housing conditions in voluntary alcohol drinking behaviors in C57Bl/6J mice, facilitating nuanced insights into the potential contributions to AUD etiology.
酒精使用障碍(AUD)是一个重大的全球健康问题。尽管历史上男性的发病率较高,但女性的AUD患病率及与酒精相关的负面后果正在上升。人类的孤独感与饮酒增加有关,而传统的啮齿动物饮酒模型涉及单笼饲养,这给研究社交丰富化带来了挑战。我们开发了LIQ PARTI(具有多动物RFID跟踪集成功能的舔舐实例量化器),这是一种开源工具,用于在群居环境中检查笼内连续获取两瓶选择的饮酒行为,研究性别和社会隔离对C57Bl/6J小鼠乙醇消耗和饮酒发作微观结构的影响。LIQ PARTI基于我们之前开发的单笼饲养LIQ HD系统,利用基于电容的传感器和RFID技术准确跟踪饮酒行为。群居的雌性小鼠比雄性小鼠表现出更高的乙醇偏好,而雄性小鼠则表现出与笼子变化相关的独特的乙醇偏好波动模式,这表明可能存在与压力相关的反应。长期摄入乙醇明显改变了雄性和雌性小鼠的饮酒发作微观结构,突出了性别和社会环境对饮酒行为的影响。使用LIQ HD系统进行社会隔离会增加两性的液体摄入量和乙醇偏好,并伴随着饮酒发作微观结构中与性别和液体相关的变化。然而,这些影响在重新社交后基本逆转,表明这些行为对社会环境的可塑性。利用一种新型的群居笼内舔舐计装置,我们的研究结果说明了性别和饲养条件在C57Bl/6J小鼠自愿饮酒行为中的关键相互作用,有助于深入了解对AUD病因学的潜在贡献。