Sex differences in neural networks recruited by frontloaded binge alcohol drinking

Author:

Ardinger Cherish E.1ORCID,Chen Yueyi2,Kimbrough Adam234ORCID,Grahame Nicholas J.1ORCID,Lapish Christopher C.15

Affiliation:

1. Addiction Neuroscience, Department of Psychology and Indiana Alcohol Research Center Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis Indianapolis Indiana USA

2. Department of Basic Medical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

3. Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

4. Purdue Institute of Inflammation, Immunology, and Infectious Disease Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

5. Stark Neuroscience Research Institute Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis Indianapolis Indiana USA

Abstract

AbstractFrontloading is an alcohol drinking pattern where intake is skewed towards the onset of access. This study aimed to identify brain regions involved in frontloading. Whole brain imaging was performed in 63 C57Bl/6J (32 female, 31 male) mice that underwent 8 days of binge drinking using drinking‐in‐the‐dark (DID). On Days 1–7 mice received 20% (v/v) alcohol or water for 2 h. Intake was measured in 1‐min bins using volumetric sippers. On Day 8 mice were perfused 80 min into the DID session and brains were extracted. Brains were processed to stain for Fos protein using iDISCO+. Following light sheet imaging, ClearMap2.1 was used to register brains to the Allen Brain Atlas and detect Fos+ cells. For network analyses, Day 8 drinking patterns were used to characterize mice as frontloaders or non‐frontloaders using a change‐point analysis. Functional correlation matrices were calculated for each group from log10 Fos values. Euclidean distances were calculated from these R values and clustering was used to determine modules (highly connected groups of brain regions). In males, alcohol access decreased modularity (three modules in both frontloaders and non‐frontloaders) as compared to water (seven modules). In females, an opposite effect was observed. Alcohol access (nine modules for frontloaders) increased modularity as compared to water (five modules). Further, different brain regions served as hubs in frontloaders as compared to control groups. In conclusion, alcohol consumption led to fewer, but more densely connected, groups of brain regions in males but not females and we identify several brain‐wide signatures of frontloading.

Funder

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Indiana Alcohol Research Center

Publisher

Wiley

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