Miczek K A, Barros H M, Sakoda L, Weerts E M
Department of Psychology, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts 02155, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 1998 Nov;22(8):1698-705.
The objective of the current research was to study the large individual differences in alcohol effects on aggressive behavior under systematically varied conditions in experimental protocols with mice. Three experiments were conducted with outbred Swiss-Webster derived mice that identified those individuals whose aggressive behavior was reliably heightened by low acute alcohol doses. In all experimental protocols, low alcohol doses were orally administered to a "resident" male mouse that subsequently confronted an "intruder" opponent for 5 min while all salient elements of aggressive behavior and motor activities were quantified. In all three experiments, alcohol (1.0 g/kg) heightened aggressive behavior by at least two standard deviations of the individual's water vehicle control mean in 27% of the mice. In 64% of mice, no reliable change in aggressive behavior was detected after the identical alcohol treatment, and in 9% of the mice alcohol decreased aggressive behavior. Experiments differed in protocol indicating that these aggression-heightening effects were evident in resident mice that were either maintained at restricted or unlimited amounts of food, housed singly or in breeding pairs with a female partner, and conditioned to perform daily a food-reinforced task or remained undisturbed. The first experiment found the aggression-heightening effects to persist during weekly challenges for at least 2 months (n = 8 of 30). The second experiment showed these effects at intervals from 5 to 60 min after alcohol administration. Blood alcohol concentrations reached peak level within 5 to 10 min after oral administration in mice that had confronted an intruder. Those mice in whom alcohol heightened aggressive behavior (n = 21) did not differ from those that showed suppressed levels (n = 9) in terms of blood alcohol concentrations (79.6 vs. 82.4 mg%), suggesting that the intensity and frequency of aggressive behavior after alcohol were not directly dependent on the amount of alcohol in the circulation. The third experiment revealed that alcohol's (0.1 to 5.6 g/kg) effects on heightened aggressive behavior (n = 11) are dissociated from those on concurrently measured high- or low-rate operant performance as engendered by a multiple FR 30-FI 600 sec schedule of reinforcement. Current results indicate that this alcohol effect is relatively specific to aggressive behavior in individual animals, offering the opportunity for neuropharmacological and molecular characterization.
当前研究的目的是在对小鼠的实验方案中,系统改变条件的情况下,研究酒精对攻击行为影响的个体差异。对远交系瑞士韦伯斯特衍生小鼠进行了三项实验,确定了那些低急性酒精剂量能可靠地增强其攻击行为的个体。在所有实验方案中,给一只“常住”雄性小鼠口服低剂量酒精,随后该小鼠与一只“入侵者”对手对峙5分钟,同时对攻击行为和运动活动的所有显著要素进行量化。在所有三项实验中,酒精(1.0克/千克)使27%的小鼠的攻击行为增强至个体用水作为对照时平均值的至少两个标准差以上。在64%的小鼠中,相同酒精处理后未检测到攻击行为有可靠变化,在9%的小鼠中酒精降低了攻击行为。实验方案有所不同,这表明这些攻击增强效应在常住小鼠中很明显,这些小鼠的食物量有限或无限,单独饲养或与雌性伴侣成对饲养,并且要么每天接受食物强化任务训练,要么不受干扰。第一个实验发现攻击增强效应在每周的挑战中持续至少2个月(30只中有8只)。第二个实验显示在酒精给药后5至60分钟的间隔内有这些效应。在与入侵者对峙的小鼠中,口服酒精后5至10分钟血液酒精浓度达到峰值水平。酒精增强攻击行为的小鼠(21只)与显示攻击行为受抑制的小鼠(9只)在血液酒精浓度方面没有差异(分别为79.6和82.4毫克%),这表明酒精摄入后攻击行为的强度和频率并不直接取决于循环中的酒精量。第三个实验表明,酒精(0.1至5.6克/千克)对增强攻击行为(11只)的影响与对由多重固定比率30-固定间隔600秒强化程序产生的同时测量的高比率或低比率操作性行为的影响是分离的。当前结果表明,这种酒精效应相对特定于个体动物的攻击行为,为神经药理学和分子特征研究提供了机会。