Adolescent binge drinking alters adult brain neurotransmitter gene expression, behavior, brain regional volumes, and neurochemistry in mice.
- Authors
- Coleman, Leon G; He, Jun; Lee, Joohwi; Styner, Martin; Crews, Fulton T
- Year
- 2011
- Journal
- Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research
- PMID
- 21223304
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2010.01385.x
- PMCID
- PMC3544413
BACKGROUND: Binge drinking is common in human adolescents. The adolescent brain is undergoing structural maturation and has a unique sensitivity to alcohol neurotoxicity. Therefore, adolescent binge ethanol may have long-term effects on the adult brain that alter brain structure and behaviors that are relevant to alcohol-use disorders. METHODS: To determine whether adolescent ethanol (AE) binge drinking alters the adult brain, male C57BL/6 mice were treated with either water or ethanol during adolescence (5 g/kg/d, i.g., postnatal days P28 to P37) and assessed during adulthood (P60 to P88). An array of neurotransmitter-specific genes, behavioral tests (i.e., reversal learning, prepulse inhibition, and open field), and postmortem brain structure using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and immunohistochemistry, were employed to assess persistent alterations in adult brain. RESULTS: At P38, 24 hours after AE binge, many neurotransmitter genes, particularly cholinergic and dopaminergic, were reduced by ethanol treatment. Interestingly, dopamine receptor type 4 mRNA was reduced and confirmed using immunohistochemistry. Normal control maturation (P38 to P88) resulted in decreased neurotransmitter mRNA, e.g., an average decrease of 56%. Following AE treatment, adults showed greater gene expression reductions than controls, averaging 73%. Adult spatial learning assessed in the Morris water maze was not changed by AE treatment, but reversal learning experiments revealed deficits. Assessment of adult brain region volumes using MRI indicated that the olfactory bulb and basal forebrain were smaller in adults following AE. Immunohistochemical analyses found reduced basal forebrain area and fewer basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescent binge ethanol treatment reduces adult neurotransmitter gene expression, particularly cholinergic genes, reduces basal forebrain and olfactory bulb volumes, and causes a reduction in the density of basal forebrain acetylcholine neurons. Loss of cholinergic neurons and forebrain structure could underlie adult reversal learning deficits following adolescent binge drinking.
Experimental Design included adolescent treatment groups (A) and adult treatment groups (B) followed with assessments 40-50 days after treatment. (A) Adolescent mice (P28) were treated with either water or ethanol (5g/kg i.g.) once daily for ten days during adolescence (P28-37). One group underwent behavioral testing in adulthood (P60-72) and were sacrificed one week after the end of behavioral testing for postmortem brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) (N=10 Control, 8 Ethanol). A second group of adolescent mice was treated with either water or ethanol (5g/kg i.g.) once daily for ten days (P28-37)and assessed for neurotransmitter gene expression 24 hours after ethanol treatment (P38; N=6 Control, 6 Ethanol) as well as after a 50 day period of maturation to adulthood (P88; N=6 Control, 6 Ethanol). (B) Young adult (P88) treatment with either water or ethanol (5g/kg i.g.) once daily for ten days (P88-97). Mice were sacrificed either 24 hours (P98; N=6 Control, 6 Ethanol) or 50 days later (P148; N=5 Control, 6 Ethanol). The Neurotransmitter Receptor and Regulator Gene Superarrayβ’ was used to measure gene expression 24 hours after ethanol treatment in both adolescent (P38) and young adult groups (P98). Similarly following a 50 day period of maturation the Neurotransmitter Receptor and Regulator Gene Superarrayβ’ determined expression in young adult (P88) and mature adult (P148) groups.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of two experimental design timelines (A and B) illustrating treatment and assessment schedules for mice. Timeline A shows adolescent mice (P28βP37) treated with water or ethanol, with subsequent assessments including a gene array at P38, behavioral testing from P60βP72, and MRI/IHC at P79 and a gene array at P88. Timeline B shows young adult mice (P88βP97) treated with water or ethanol, with gene array assessments performed at P98 and P148.
Adolescent Binge Ethanol Treatment Reduces Choline Acetyltransferase (ChAT) gene expression and ChAT-immunoreactivity. Acetylcholine neurons were identified by immunohistochemistry for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). (A) ChAT mRNA levels changed significantly across development. ChAT mRNA in adolescent mice (P38 β 100%) decreased during maturation to P88 (64% reduction, *p<0.05) in control animals. ChAT mRNA expression 24 hours following adolescent ethanol binge treatment showed a 55% reduction (P38). Fifty days after the adolescent ethanol binge ChAT mRNA levels were reduced 85% (**p<0.01 vs P38 control). (B) Reduced ChAT-immunoreactive (ChAT+IR) neurons in adults. ChAT+IR neurons were counted in the posterior regions of the basal forebrain (bregma 0.14mm to β0.22mm), where the greatest volume changes were observed. This included the horizontal diagonal band, substantia innominata, ventral pallidum, and magnocellular preoptic nucleus. Significant reductions in the number of ChAT+IR neurons per area were observed (7.5% reduction, *p<0.05, N=10 Control, 8 Ethanol). Representative images from an adult controls (C) and adults following adolescent binge ethanol treatment (D) at the same bregma (0.14mm) showing differences in ChAT+IR.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of a line graph (A), a bar chart (B), and two microscopy images (C, D). Panel A shows a decrease in ChAT mRNA levels from postnatal day 38 to 88 in both control and adolescent ethanol (AE) binge groups, with the AE binge group showing significantly lower expression at both time points (*p<0.05, **p<0.01). Panel B indicates a significant reduction in the density of ChAT-immunoreactive (ChAT+IR) neurons per mmΒ² in adult ethanol-treated mice compared to controls (*p<0.05), which is qualitatively supported by the representative immunohistochemistry images in panels C and D.
Additional details are within the methods. Adolescent ethanol (AE) binge treatment, but not adult ethanol binge, robustly alters the developmental trajectory of neurotransmitter-specific gene expression. Mice received water or ethanol (5g/kg, i.g.) once a day for ten days during either adolescence (P28-37) or adulthood (P88-97). Neurotransmitter-specific gene expression was assessed using a gene SuperArray either 24 hours (P38 or P88) or 50 days (P88 or P148) after the last alcohol treatment. Expression for each gene is compared to control expression levels 24 hours after treatment (P38 or P88). (A) Developmental changes in gene expression in young control mice. A developmental reduction in neurotransmitter receptor and regulator gene expression was observed across the entire array (Average of 56% reduction, 2-way ANOVA, ***p<0.001) with 36 genes reaching a p<0.05. Genes that showed either a potential increase in expression or no reduction at all are labeled. (B) Developmental changes in gene expression in adult control mice. A developmental reduction in neurotransmitter receptor and regulator gene expression was observed across all the genes tested (2-way ANOVA, ***p<0.0001) that was on average less than controls (33% average reduction) with 11 genes having a p<0.05. (C) Adolescent binge ethanol treatment potentiates the developmental reduction in gene expression, causing significant reductions in 59 genes (p<0.05, t-test of normalized ΞCt values vs P38 control) with 31 genes maintaining statistical significance following Bonferroni adjusted post-tests. (D) Adult binge ethanol resulted in only two genes showing reductions from P98 to P148 that reached a p<0.05, with zero changes following Bonferroni adjusted post-tests. Thick lines and corresponding labels illustrate which treatment was given prior to testing.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of four line graphs (A-D) showing the developmental trajectory of neurotransmitter-specific gene expression in mice. The y-axes represent gene expression as a percentage of control levels, and the x-axes show developmental days (P38 to P88 for A and C; P98 to P148 for B and D). Panels A and B show a general developmental reduction in gene expression for water-control groups (average reductions of 56% and 33%, respectively, $p < 0.001$). Panel C shows that adolescent ethanol (AE) binge treatment potentiates this reduction (31 genes significant after Bonferroni correction), while Panel D shows that adult binge ethanol results in minimal changes (0 genes significant after Bonferroni correction).
Effects of adolescent binge ethanol treatment ondopamine D4 receptor (D4DR) gene and protein expression. Adolescent mice received either water or binge ethanol (5g/kg once daily, i.g.) for ten days (P28-37). Mice were sacrificed 24 hours (P38) or 50 days (P88) after the last treatment for RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. (A) The adolescent ethanol binge treatment caused a 71% (*p<0.05 vs P38 controls) reduction in D4DR gene expression in whole brain 24 hours after treatment at P38 that remained reduced at P88. Control mice underwent a 55% developmental reduction in D4DR gene expression (P38 to P88). (B) Quantification of punctate D4DR immunoreactivity (D4DR+IR) in the orbitofrontal cortex in adolescent mice (P38). Adolescent mice that received binge ethanol had 44% less D4DR+IR in the orbitofrontal cortex than controls (Controls: 26800 Β± 5500 D4DR+IR puncta/mm2; Ethanol: 11790 Β± 2900 D4DR+IR puncta/mm2, *p<0.05, t-test; N=3 Control, N=4 Ethanol). Although gene expression is whole brain and D4DR+IR protein levels are orbital frontal cortex, both show significant decreases following adolescent ethanol binge treatment. (C and D) Images of orbitofrontal cortex from adolescent (C: P38) and adult (D: P88) mice. C: Images of punctate D4DR+IR staining in P38 control and P38 binge ethanol (Etoh) treated mice (magnification 120Γ). D4DR+IR puncta are identified by the arrow heads (Ξ). Adult D4DR+IR are both punctate and somatic. Somatic staining is identified by arrows. D: Images of orbitofrontal cortex from adult (P88) mice. Note D4DR+IR staining in P88 adult is both punctate and somatic. Quantification of P88 D4DR+IR was 6800 Β± 4500 D4DR+IR puncta/mm2 for controls and 4790 Β± 2900 D4DR+IR puncta/mm2 for ethanol treated animals (N=3 Control, N=4 Ethanol). (t-test; vs P38 controls, Scale bar: 20 micron).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of a line graph (A), a bar chart (B), and immunohistochemistry images (C and D). The line graph shows a significant reduction in D4DR gene expression in the whole brain of adolescent ethanol binge mice at P38 and P88 compared to controls, while the bar chart shows a significant decrease in D4DR immunoreactivity (D4DR+IR) puncta in the orbitofrontal cortex of P38 ethanol-treated mice (*p<0.05). The microscopy images visualize D4DR+IR staining in the orbitofrontal cortex, highlighting punctate staining (arrowheads) at P38 and both punctate and somatic staining (arrows) at P88.
Adolescent alcohol binge differentially alters developmental trajectory of neurotransmitter receptor and regulator gene expression. RT-PCR was performed using an RT2 Profiler PCR Array for neurotransmitter receptor and regulator genes. mRNA levels are presented as percent of P38 control to demonstrate the effects across development Patterns of adolescent ethanol binge (AE binge) treated animal developmental trajectory for CholecystokininΞ² (CCKΞ²) and Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) are shown. (Left) Binge ethanol treatment reduces P38 CCKΞ² expression by 64% of P38 control. Both control and ethanol groups show a similar developmental decline during the fifty days after the adolescent ethanol binge. In controls, CCKΞ² receptor gene expression decreases 55% across development from P38 (100%) to P88 (45% of P38 control, *p<0.05). In ethanol binge animals CCKΞ² mRNA levels were reduced 82% (**p<0.01 vs P38 control). However, the developmental decline from P38 AE binge (55% of P38 control) to P88 AE binge (18% of P38 control) is comparable to the control developmental decline. Adult P88 AE binge animals express 39% of P88 control CCKΞ² mRNA expression (β p<0.05, vs P88 control) similar to the 45% P38 AE binge animals suggesting the developmental decline continued a similar course following the initial AE binge insult. (Right) Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) shows a different pattern. Binge ethanol treatment does not change P38 COMT gene expression. The 50 day developmental decline in COMT brain gene expression in controls was not statistically significant (29% reduction, p=0.24). However, AE binge treated animals showed a 64% developmental reduction in COMT gene expression (p<0.01 vs P38 controls). AE binge treatment appears to alter the developmental trajectory of COMT gene expression.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of two line graphs showing the mRNA expression levels of $\text{CCK}\beta$ (left) and $\text{COMT}$ (right) genes on postnatal days 38 and 88, expressed as a percentage of the P38 control. For $\text{CCK}\beta$, the AE binge group starts at a significantly lower expression level than the control at P38, and both groups show a similar downward trajectory toward P88. For $\text{COMT}$, both groups start at similar levels at P38, but the AE binge group shows a significantly steeper decline by P88 compared to the control group. Statistical significance is indicated by asterisks (*) and other symbols ($\dagger, \S$) at the P88 time points.
Mice that received ethanol binge during adolescence had a deficit in reversal learning as adults. Following acquisition of reversal learning, mice were tested in a 60 second probe trial in the absence of the hidden platform. (A) Control mice spent a nearly equal amount time in the initial learning quadrant (Quadrant 1, 22.4%Β±3.02) and the reversal learning quadrant (Quadrant 3, 25.5%Β±2.5). Adult mice were treated with ethanol during adolescence spent more than twice as much time in the quadrant where the platform was during initial learning (Quadrant 1, 35.6%Β±5.5) than where the platform was during reversal learning (Quadrant 3, 15.5%Β±7.7) (**p < 0.01, t-test). Also, control mice spent significantly more time in the reversal quadrant (Quadrant 3, 25.5%Β±2.5) than the mice that received alcohol during adolescence (15.5%Β±7.7) (β p<0.05, t test). Data is presented as mean Β± SEM. N = 7 Control, 7 Ethanol. (B) Representative tracings of the reversal probe trial from one animal in each treatment group, depicting the increased time spent by control mice in the reversal learning quadrant (Quadrant 3) compared to adolescent ethanol treated mice, which spent more time in the initial learning quadrant (Quadrant 1).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of a bar chart (A) and representative swim path tracings (B) comparing the behavior of control and adolescent ethanol-treated mice during a reversal probe trial. The bar chart shows that ethanol-treated mice spent significantly more time in the initial learning quadrant (Quadrant 1) than the reversal quadrant (Quadrant 3) (**p < 0.01), whereas control mice spent similar amounts of time in both. Additionally, control mice spent significantly more time in Quadrant 3 compared to the ethanol group (β p < 0.05). The tracings in panel B visually illustrate these trends, showing more concentrated activity in Quadrant 3 for the control mouse and in Quadrant 1 for the ethanol-treated mouse.
Representative automatic segmentation of structural MRI. (A) Representative structural MRI of a control mouse. Mean diffusivity images were computed from reconstructed diffusion tensor data. (B) Brain regions were segmented in an automated fashion in order to identify candidate regions for further manual segmentation. Key: pink-olfactory bulb, blue-neocortex, brown-basal forebrain, yellow-anterior commissure, bright green-corpus callosum, red-hippocampus, purple-thalamus, turquoise-hypothalamus, dark gray-rest of midbrain, light gray- central gray, orange-superior colliculi, dark green-cerebellum, yellow green-brain stem.
LLM interpretation
This figure presents structural MRI data of a control mouse brain. Panel A shows a grayscale mean diffusivity image computed from diffusion tensor data. Panel B displays an automated segmentation of the brain, where different anatomical regions (such as the neocortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum) are highlighted in distinct colors.
Adolescent ethanol binge causes a reduction in the volume of the olfactory bulb in adults. Adolescent mice received either water or ethanol (5g/kg) once a day for ten days (P28-37). Postmortem MRI was performed on adults (P79). Following automatic segmentation, manual segmentation of the olfactory was performed by blinded investigators. (A) 3D representation of the brain showing large relative size of the olfactory bulb in the rodent brain (darkened). (B) Overlay of 3D renderings of representative control and ethanol treated adult olfactory bulbs. Arrowheads highlight volume differences between control (black) and ethanol treated (white) groups (C) Adult olfactory bulb volume quantification following manual correction. Adult mice that received binge ethanol treatment during adolescence showed a 7.8% reduction in the olfactory bulb volume (Control: 23.37 Β± 0.42 mm3; Ethanol: 21.54 Β± 0.33 mm3; **p<0.005; N=10 Control, 8 Ethanol).
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of 3D brain renderings and a scatter plot comparing the olfactory bulb volume of adult mice following adolescent water or ethanol treatment. Panel A shows the olfactory bulb's location in sagittal and top views, while Panel B provides an overlay of representative control (black) and ethanol-treated (yellow) bulbs, with arrows indicating volume differences. Panel C is a scatter plot showing a significant reduction in olfactory bulb volume for the adolescent ethanol group compared to the control group (**p<0.005).
Adolescent ethanol binge causes a reduction in the volume of the basal forebrain/medial septum brain region in adults. Adolescent mice received either water or ethanol (5g/kg) once a day for ten days (P28-37). Postmortem MRI was performed on adults (P79), the basal forebrain region was manually segmented by blinded investigators, and its volume was measured. (A) 3D schematic of the location of the basal forebrain/medial septum region from the top, sagittal, and front/coronal perspectives. (B) Basal forebrain volumes from manual segmentation. Adult mice that previously received ethanol showed a 4.6% reduction in the volume of the basal forebrain/medial septum region (Control: 11.95 Β± 0.12 mm3; Ethanol: 11.40 Β± 0.12 mm3, **p<0.01; N=10 Control, 8 Ethanol). (C) A regional analysis of the basal forebrain volume shows that the majority of the volume reduction (11% reduced from controls) was to the posterior segment of the basal forebrain (bregma + 0.13 to β0.46), ***p<0.001. (D) sagittal 3D rendering of two representative cases showing volume reduction in adult mice that received adolescent binge ethanol.
LLM interpretation
This figure evaluates the effect of adolescent ethanol binge on adult basal forebrain volume. Panel A is a scatter plot showing a statistically significant reduction in total basal forebrain volume in the adolescent ethanol group compared to controls (**p<0.01). Panel B provides a 3D sagittal rendering and zoomed-in view comparing the volume of the control (yellow) and ethanol (red) groups. Panel C is a bar chart showing regional volume analysis, indicating that the volume reduction is most significant in the posterior segment (***p<0.001).
Basal forebrain nuclei area reduction in adults following adolescent ethanol treatment. In order to confirm MRI volume reductions, the area of the basal forebrain region nuclei was measured microscopically on sections immunolabeled for parvalbumin using bioquant software, in three different regions defined by their distances from bregma (1.34 to 1.1 mm, 0.86 to 0.14 mm, and 0.02 to β0.22 mm). Area measures were taken on up to three different immunolabeled sections per mouse, N=4-7 mice for each region. (A) The basal forebrain area was significantly reduced in the posterior bregma of the basal forebrain: 20% difference, 0.02 to β0.22 mm, *p<0.05; N=5 Control and 5 Ethanol mice. Basal forebrain areas measured at bregma 0.14mm (B) and β0.22mm (C) are shown from representative sections. The anterior commissure (open arrow) and internal capsule (closed arrow) were used as landmarks and are labeled on the atlas and image to help with orientation. Key: VP-ventral pallidum, SI-substantia innominata, HDB-horizontal diagonal band, MCPO-magnocellular preoptic nucleus, LPO-lateral preoptic area, IPAC-interstitial nucleus of the posterior limb of the anterior commissure, BST-bed nucleus of stria terminalis, AAD-anterior amygdaloid area dorsal, aca-anterior commissure anterior.
LLM interpretation
This figure consists of a bar chart (A) and representative microscopy images with corresponding anatomical diagrams (B and C). The bar chart compares the basal forebrain area ($\text{mm}^2$) between Control and Adolescent Ethanol groups across three regions: Anterior, Middle, and Posterior. A statistically significant reduction in area is observed in the Posterior region for the Adolescent Ethanol group (*p < 0.05), while no significant differences are visible in the Anterior or Middle regions.
| # | Section | Preview |
|---|---|---|
| 60 | Discussion | In summary, adolescent binge ethanol treatment of mice reduces young adult neurotransmitter gene⦠|
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| 10th graders | cohort |
| 12th grade seniors local | cohort |
| 8th graders | cohort |
| acetylcholine | drug |
| ACHE | gene |
| acoustic startle response | phenotype |
| ACTB | gene |
| addiction | phenotype |
| adolescent binge alcohol treated local | cohort |
| Adolescent binge alcohol treatment local | cohort |
| adolescent binge drinking local | cohort |
| adolescent binge drinking local | phenotype |
| Adolescent binge drinking local | phenotype |
| adolescent binge ethanol local | cohort |
| Adolescent binge ethanol local | cohort |
| Adolescent binge ethanol exposure local | cohort |
| adolescent binge ethanol group local | cohort |
| Adolescent binge ethanol treated mice local | cohort |
| adolescent binge ethanol treatment local | phenotype |
| Adolescent binge ethanol treatment local | cohort |
| Adolescent binge ethanol treatment local | phenotype |
| Adolescent binge group local | cohort |
| adolescent binge treatment local | cohort |
| Adolescent Binge Treatment local | cohort |
| Adolescent brain maturation local | cohort |
| Adolescent brain structural development local | phenotype |
| Adolescent control (P38) local | cohort |
| Adolescent ethanol-exposed mice local | cohort |
| Adolescent ethanol-treated mice local | cohort |
| Adolescent maturation (P38-P88) local | cohort |
| adolescent mice | cohort |
| adolescent rats | cohort |
| adolescents | cohort |
| adolescent-youth limited adult alcohol dependence local | phenotype |
| adult binge ethanol local | cohort |
| Adult binge treatment local | cohort |
| Adult brain local | phenotype |
| Adult ethanol binge mice local | cohort |
| Adulthood ethanol binge (P88-P97) local | cohort |
| adult mice | cohort |
| Adult P148 local | cohort |
| adult rat binge drinking model local | cohort |
| Adult rat binge drinking model local | cohort |
| adult rats | cohort |
| adults | cohort |
| AE binge treatment local | cohort |
| AE binge young adult (P88) local | cohort |
| AE exposure local | drug |
| AE treated young adults local | cohort |
| AE treatment local | cohort |
| Age matched controls local | cohort |
| aggression | phenotype |
| alcohol | phenotype |
| alcohol dependence | phenotype |
| Alcohol dependent human adolescents local | cohort |
| alcoholism | phenotype |
| Alcohol Use Disorder | phenotype |
| Alzheimer's disease | phenotype |
| amygdala | anatomy |
| Anterior amygdaloid area dorsal local | anatomy |
| anterior commissure | anatomy |
| anxiety | phenotype |
| anxiety assessments local | phenotype |
| anxiety-like behavior | phenotype |
| Anxiety-like behavior (elevated plus maze) local | phenotype |
| attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | phenotype |
| basal forebrain dysfunction local | phenotype |
| Basal forebrain nuclei local | anatomy |
| Basal forebrain/septum volume reduction local | phenotype |
| basal forebrain volume reduction local | phenotype |
| Bed nucleus of striatum local | anatomy |
| Behavioral control of executive functions local | phenotype |
| Behavioral testing | phenotype |
| binge drinking | phenotype |
| binge ethanol local | drug |
| Bio-rad MyiQ Single-Color RT PCR Detection System local | drug |
| blood alcohol level | phenotype |
| brain | anatomy |
| brain development | phenotype |
| brain neurotransmitter-specific gene expression local | phenotype |
| brain structure | anatomy |
| Brain volume reductions local | phenotype |
| bregma local | anatomy |
| C57BL/6J | cohort |
| C57/BL6 mice local | cohort |
| CALB1 | gene |
| CALB2 | gene |
| calbindin local | phenotype |
| calretinin local | phenotype |
| Cck | gene |
| CCKBR local | gene |
| Center time local | phenotype |
| Ch4 region local | anatomy |
| Charles River Labs local | cohort |
| Chat | gene |
| ChAT local | drug |
| ChAT+IR neurons local | phenotype |
| cholinergic | drug |
| cholinergic genes | gene |
| cholinergic neuron density local | phenotype |
| Cholinergic neuron density local | phenotype |
| Cholinergic neuron immunohistochemistry local | phenotype |
| cholinergic neurons | phenotype |
| Chrm1 | gene |
| CHRM2 | gene |
| CHRM3 | gene |
| CHRM4 | gene |
| Chrm5 | gene |
| CHRNA | gene |
| closed arms time local | phenotype |
| cocaine | phenotype |
| college students | cohort |
| COMT | gene |
| control | cohort |
| control group | cohort |
| controls | cohort |
| corpus callosum | anatomy |
| cortex | anatomy |
| Decreased motivation local | phenotype |
| Decussation of the anterior commissure local | anatomy |
| Delayed growth spurt local | phenotype |
| Developmental downregulation of neurotransmitter-specific genes local | phenotype |
| diagonal band of Broca | anatomy |
| DNAase | drug |
| Dopaminergic system | drug |
| DRD1 | gene |
| DRD2 | gene |
| DRD4 | gene |
| drug dependence | phenotype |
| Elevated plus maze local | phenotype |
| Enhanced fear conditioning local | phenotype |
| ethanol consumption | phenotype |
| Ethanol treated mice local | cohort |
| Ethanol treatment group local | cohort |
| Exaggerated thrill seeking local | phenotype |
| Exploration local | phenotype |
| exploratory behavior | phenotype |
| Faster ethanol metabolism local | phenotype |
| fear conditioning | phenotype |
| Floating behavior local | phenotype |
| forebrain | anatomy |
| Forebrain MRI volume local | phenotype |
| frontal cortex | anatomy |
| Frontal neurodegeneration local | phenotype |
| GABA | phenotype |
| GABRA | gene |
| Gabra4 | gene |
| GAD1 | gene |
| Galantin receptor 2 local | gene |
| GALR1 | gene |
| GAPDH | gene |
| gene expression | phenotype |
| genu | anatomy |
| glial fibrillary acidic protein local | phenotype |
| global locomotor activity local | phenotype |
| globus pallidus | anatomy |
| GLRA1 local | gene |
| GRPR local | gene |
| GUSB | gene |
| heavy drinking | phenotype |
| hidden platform task local | phenotype |
| Hidden platform tasks local | phenotype |
| High activity | phenotype |
| High peak blood ethanol levels local | phenotype |
| High social interaction local | phenotype |
| High voluntary ethanol consumption local | phenotype |
| hippocampus | anatomy |
| Histologic area local | phenotype |
| horizontal diagonal band local | anatomy |
| Horizontal diagonal band local | anatomy |
| HPRT1 | gene |
| HSP90AB1 local | gene |
| human adolescents | cohort |
| human alcoholics | phenotype |
| impulsivity | phenotype |
| Increased neurotoxicity local | phenotype |
| Inhibition of frontal neurogenesis local | phenotype |
| intelligence | phenotype |
| internal capsule | anatomy |
| Interstitial nucleus of the posterior limb of the anterior commissure local | anatomy |
| Latency to find platform local | phenotype |
| Lateral preoptic areas local | anatomy |
| Lateral septal regions local | anatomy |
| lateral septum | anatomy |
| learning | phenotype |
| learning and memory | phenotype |
| locomotor activity | phenotype |
| Locomotor open field activity local | phenotype |
| Loss of neurogenesis local | phenotype |
| Low sedative response local | phenotype |
| Low swimming velocity local | phenotype |
| Magnocellular preoptic nucleus local | anatomy |
| Male C57BL/6 mice local | cohort |
| Marmosets local | cohort |
| mean diffusivity | phenotype |
| medial septal/diagonal band local | anatomy |
| medial septal nuclei local | anatomy |
| medial septum | anatomy |
| memory | phenotype |
| mice | cohort |
| Mice (post-natal days 28 to 42) local | cohort |
| Morris water maze | phenotype |
| Morris Water Maze acquisition local | phenotype |
| Morris Water Maze reversal learning local | phenotype |
| Motivational behaviors local | phenotype |
| Mouse Neurotransmitter Receptors and Regulators RT2 Profilerβ’ PCR Array local | drug |
| necrosis | phenotype |
| neocortex | anatomy |
| neurodegenerative diseases | phenotype |
| neurotoxicity | phenotype |
| Neurotransmitter-specific gene expression local | phenotype |
| Neurotransmitter-specific genes local | gene |
| No anxiety-like behavior local | phenotype |
| Noldus Ethovision local | drug |
| Non-binge drinkers local | cohort |
| Nontoxic poster paint local | drug |
| normal controls | cohort |
| Normal spatial learning local | phenotype |
| novelty seeking | phenotype |
| NPFFR2 local | gene |
| NPY | gene |
| nucleus basalis | anatomy |
| olfactory bulb | anatomy |
| Olfactory bulb volume reduction local | phenotype |
| olfactory deficits local | phenotype |
| open field | phenotype |
| open field center time local | phenotype |
| orbitofrontal cortex | anatomy |
| Overall activity local | phenotype |
| P148 control local | cohort |
| P148 ethanol local | cohort |
| P38 local | cohort |
| P38 local | phenotype |
| P38 adolescent control mice local | cohort |
| P38 binge ethanol treated mice local | cohort |
| P38 control group local | cohort |
| P38 ethanol group local | cohort |
| P88 local | cohort |
| P88 local | phenotype |
| P88 binge ethanol treated mice local | cohort |
| P88 control group local | cohort |
| P88 controls local | cohort |
| P88 ethanol group local | cohort |
| P88 ethanol treated animals local | cohort |
| P98 control group local | cohort |
| P98 ethanol group local | cohort |
| paraformaldehyde | drug |
| parvalbumin local | drug |
| Parvalbumin local | drug |
| Parvalbumin | gene |
| pentobarbital | drug |
| perseverative response pattern local | phenotype |
| perseverative reversal learning deficits local | phenotype |
| phosphate-buffered saline | drug |
| Play behavior | phenotype |
| Posterior basal forebrain local | anatomy |
| Posterior forebrain local | anatomy |
| postmortem adult mice local | cohort |
| prefrontal cortex | anatomy |
| prepulse inhibition | phenotype |
| proactive interference local | phenotype |
| Probe trial performance local | phenotype |
| PROKR2 local | gene |
| Pvalb | gene |
| Quadrant 1 local | anatomy |
| Quadrant 3 local | anatomy |
| rats | cohort |
| Rats (adolescent binge drinking models) local | cohort |
| Reduced adult olfactory bulb volume local | phenotype |
| Reduced basal forebrain area local | phenotype |
| Reduced basal forebrain volume local | phenotype |
| Reduced ethanol sedative response local | phenotype |
| reduced exploration | phenotype |
| Reduced forebrain area local | phenotype |
| Reduced histological basal forebrain area local | phenotype |
| Regional volume loss local | phenotype |
| reversal learning | phenotype |
| reversal learning ability local | phenotype |
| Reversal learning deficits local | phenotype |
| reversal learning dysfunction local | phenotype |
| risk taking | phenotype |
| RNeasy column local | drug |
| RT first strand kit local | drug |
| saline | drug |
| scan date local | phenotype |
| schizophrenia | phenotype |
| sensorimotor gating | phenotype |
| Septum local | anatomy |
| social behavior | phenotype |
| Somatostatin receptor local | gene |
| spatial learning | phenotype |
| spatial learning deficits local | phenotype |
| SSTR local | gene |
| striatum | anatomy |
| substance abuse | phenotype |
| substantia innominata | anatomy |
| Swimming distance local | phenotype |
| Swimming velocity local | phenotype |
| Sybr green DNA Real-Time PCR Mix local | drug |
| third ventricle | anatomy |
| Time in closed arms local | phenotype |
| Time in open arms local | phenotype |
| total brain volume | anatomy |
| Trizol reagent | drug |
| UNC Biomedical Research Imaging Center (BRIC) local | cohort |
| UNC Neurodevelopmental Disorders Research Center Mouse Behavioral Phenotyping Core local | cohort |
| ventral pallidum | anatomy |
| ventricular expansion local | phenotype |
| verbal working memory deficits local | phenotype |
| Vertical limb of diagonal band local | anatomy |
| Visible platform local | phenotype |
| Water maze hidden platform learning local | phenotype |
| weight gain | phenotype |
| whole brain | anatomy |
| wild-type mice | cohort |
| Working memory disruption local | phenotype |
| young adult alcohol dependent subtype local | phenotype |
| Young adult alcohol dependent subtype local | phenotype |
| Young adult cohort | cohort |
| young adult control local | cohort |
| Young adult control mice local | cohort |
| Young adult control (P88) local | cohort |
| Young adult maturation (P98-P148) local | cohort |
| young adult mice local | cohort |
| Young adult mice local | cohort |
| Young Adult Mice local | cohort |
| young adult mouse local | cohort |
| young adults | cohort |
| Young adults (18-20) local | cohort |
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In this knowledge base
External
| Title | Authors | Journal | Year | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disruption of hippocampal synaptic plasticity by chronic ethanol exposure: A narrative review of neurotoxic adverse outcome pathways. | Seyedi F et al. | β | 2026 | β |
| Adolescent binge alcohol exposure accelerates Alzheimer's disease-associated basal forebrain neuropathology through proinflammatory HMGB1 signaling. | Fisher RP et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| Excessive Alcohol Use as a Risk Factor for Alzheimer's Disease: Epidemiological and Preclinical Evidence. | Anton PE et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| From Synaptic Plasticity to Neurotoxicity: Endocannabinoid Influence on Addiction and Neurodegeneration. | Basavarajappa BS et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| Impact of Neuroimmune System Activation by Adolescent Binge Alcohol Exposure on Adult Neurobiology. | Macht V et al. | β | 2025 | β |
| Alcohol, flexible behavior, and the prefrontal cortex: Functional changes underlying impaired cognitive flexibility. | Nippert KE et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Early-Stage Moderate Alcohol Feeding Dysregulates Insulin-Related Metabolic Hormone Expression in the Brain: Potential Links to Neurodegeneration Including Alzheimer's Disease. | Yang Y et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Epigenetic regulation of microglia and neurons by proinflammatory signaling following adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE) exposure and in human AUD. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Ethanol changes Nestin-promoter induced neural stem cells to disturb newborn dendritic spine remodeling in the hippocampus of mice. | Wang G et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Mixing energy drinks and alcohol during adolescence impairs brain function: A study of rat hippocampal plasticity. | Biggio F et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Neuronal-specific methylome and hydroxymethylome analysis reveal significant loci associated with alcohol use disorder. | Andrade-Brito DE et al. | β | 2024 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol and nicotine exposure alters the adult response to alcohol use. | Hauser SR et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Adolescent binge ethanol impacts H3K36me3 regulation of synaptic genes. | Brocato ER et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Alcohol use and grey matter structure: Disentangling predispositional and causal contributions in human studies. | Baranger DAA et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Indomethacin restores loss of hippocampal neurogenesis and cholinergic innervation and reduces innate immune expression and reversal learning deficits in adult male and female rats following adolescent ethanol exposure. | Macht V et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Omega-3 Recovers Cannabinoid 1 Receptor Expression in the Adult Mouse Brain after Adolescent Binge Drinking. | MartΓn-Llorente A et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Targeting Persistent Changes in Neuroimmune and Epigenetic Signaling in Adolescent Drinking to Treat Alcohol Use Disorder in Adulthood. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| The Genetically Informed Neurobiology of Addiction (GINA) model. | Bogdan R et al. | β | 2023 | β |
| Adaptation of the 5-choice serial reaction time task to measure engagement and motivation for alcohol in mice. | Starski P et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol exposure alters threat avoidance in adulthood. | Landin JD et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol exposure reduces dopamine 1 receptor modulation of prelimbic neurons projecting to the nucleus accumbens and basolateral amygdala. | Obray JD et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Adolescent Binge Alcohol Enhances Early Alzheimer's Disease Pathology in Adulthood Through Proinflammatory Neuroimmune Activation. | Barnett A et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Alcohol's effects on the mouse brain are modulated by age and sex. | Piekarski DJ et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Alcohol Withdrawal and the Associated Mood Disorders-A Review. | Ngui HHL et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Areas of Convergence and Divergence in Adolescent Social Isolation and Binge Drinking: A Review. | Lodha J et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Cholinergic and Neuroimmune Signaling Interact to Impact Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis and Alcohol Pathology Across Development. | Macht VA et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Chronic alcohol drinking persistently suppresses thalamostriatal excitation of cholinergic neurons to impair cognitive flexibility. | Ma T et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Chronic Ethanol Causes Persistent Increases in Alzheimer's Tau Pathology in Female 3xTg-AD Mice: A Potential Role for Lysosomal Impairment. | Tucker AE et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Diverging Effects of Adolescent Ethanol Exposure on Tripartite Synaptic Development across Prefrontal Cortex Subregions. | Walker CD et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Impact of adolescent intermittent ethanol exposure on interneurons and their surrounding perineuronal nets in adulthood. | Dannenhoffer CA et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Neuroimaging in alcohol use disorder: From mouse to man. | Fritz M et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Sex-specific effects of adolescent intermittent ethanol exposure-induced dysregulation of hippocampal glial cells in adulthood. | Nwachukwu KN et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Transgenerational Abnormalities Induced by Paternal Preconceptual Alcohol Drinking: Findings from Humans and Animal Models. | Terracina S et al. | β | 2022 | β |
| Adolescent binge-ethanol accelerates cognitive impairment and Ξ²-amyloid production and dysregulates endocannabinoid signaling in the hippocampus of APP/PSE mice. | Ledesma JC et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Adolescent Substance Abuse, Transgenerational Consequences and Epigenetics. | Salmanzadeh H et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Altered Activity of Lateral Orbitofrontal Cortex Neurons in Mice following Chronic Intermittent Ethanol Exposure. | Gioia DA et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Brain structure and problematic alcohol use: a test of plausible causation using latent causal variable analysis. | Hatoum AS et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Chronic alcohol exposure during critical developmental periods differentially impacts persistence of deficits in cognitive flexibility and related circuitry. | Dannenhoffer CA et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Consequences of adolescent alcohol use on adult hippocampal neurogenesis and hippocampal integrity. | Wooden JI et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Effects of adolescent substance use disorders on central cholinergic function. | Hauser SR et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Effects of Mephedrone and Amphetamine Exposure during Adolescence on Spatial Memory in Adulthood: Behavioral and Neurochemical Analysis. | Grochecki P et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Loss of Basal Forebrain Cholinergic Neurons Following Adolescent Binge Ethanol Exposure: Recovery With the Cholinesterase Inhibitor Galantamine. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Nerve Growth Factor in Alcohol Use Disorders. | Ceci FM et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Predicting binge drinking among university students: Application of integrated behavioral model. | Gutema H et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Rats exposed to intermittent ethanol during late adolescence exhibit enhanced habitual behavior following reward devaluation. | Towner TT et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| The persistent impact of adolescent binge alcohol on adult brain structural, cellular, and behavioral pathology: A role for the neuroimmune system and epigenetics. | Coleman LG et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| The role of sex in the persistent effects of adolescent alcohol exposure on behavior and neurobiology in rodents. | Robinson DL et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| TRAIL Mediates Neuronal Death in AUD: A Link between Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration. | Qin L et al. | β | 2021 | β |
| Adolescent Alcohol Exposure Produces Protracted Cognitive-Behavioral Impairments in Adult Male and Female Rats. | Macht V et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Adolescent drug exposure: A review of evidence for the development of persistent changes in brain function. | Salmanzadeh H et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Adolescent low-dose ethanol drinking in the dark increases ethanol intake later in life in C57BL/6J, but not DBA/2J mice. | Wolstenholme JT et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Adolescent neurodevelopment and substance use: Receptor expression and behavioral consequences. | Thorpe HHA et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Adolescent Vulnerability to Alcohol Use Disorder: Neurophysiological Mechanisms from Preclinical Studies. | McCool BA et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Chronic Voluntary Ethanol Drinking in Cynomolgus Macaques Elicits Gene Expression Changes in Prefrontal Cortical Area 46. | Walter NAR et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Delta Event-Related Oscillations Are Related to a History of Extreme Binge Drinking in Adolescence and Lifetime Suicide Risk. | Ehlers CL et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Effect of alcohol use on the adolescent brain and behavior. | Lees B et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Effects of chronic intermittent ethanol exposure during early and late adolescence on anxiety-like behaviors and behavioral flexibility in adulthood. | Varlinskaya EI et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Neuroimmune and epigenetic involvement in adolescent binge ethanol-induced loss of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons: Restoration with voluntary exercise. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Review of Orbitofrontal Cortex in Alcohol Dependence: A Disrupted Cognitive Map? | Shields CN et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Sex-dependent effects of chronic intermittent voluntary alcohol consumption on attentional, not motivational, measures during probabilistic learning and reversal | Aguirre CG et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Sex-dependent effects of chronic intermittent voluntary alcohol consumption on attentional, not motivational, measures during probabilistic learning and reversal. | Aguirre CG et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| The effects of adolescent alcohol exposure on learning and related neurobiology in humans and rodents. | Seemiller LR et al. | β | 2020 | β |
| Absence of compulsive drinking phenotype in adult male rats exposed to ethanol in a binge-like pattern during adolescence. | Nentwig TB et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| Adolescent but not adult ethanol binge drinking modulates ethanol behavioral effects in mice later in life. | Younis RM et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| A novel multichoice touchscreen paradigm for assessing cognitive flexibility in mice. | Piantadosi PT et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| Mechanisms of Persistent Neurobiological Changes Following Adolescent Alcohol Exposure: NADIA Consortium Findings. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| Peri-adolescent alcohol consumption increases sensitivity and dopaminergic response to nicotine during adulthood in female alcohol-preferring (P) rats: Alterations to Ξ±7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor expression. | Waeiss RA et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| Persistent Alterations of Accumbal Cholinergic Interneurons and Cognitive Dysfunction after Adolescent Intermittent Ethanol Exposure. | Galaj E et al. | β | 2019 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol exposure decreases frontostriatal resting-state functional connectivity in adulthood. | Broadwater MA et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Adolescent binge ethanol-induced loss of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons and neuroimmune activation are prevented by exercise and indomethacin. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Beneficial effects of low alcohol exposure, but adverse effects of high alcohol intake on glymphatic function. | Lundgaard I et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Binge Drinking's Effects on the Developing Brain-Animal Models. | Hiller-SturmhΓΆfel S et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Chronic moderate alcohol drinking alters insulin release without affecting cognitive and emotion-like behaviors in rats. | Nelson NG et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Effects of adolescent alcohol consumption on the brain and behaviour. | Spear LP | β | 2018 | β |
| Estrogen-Dependent Upregulation of <i>Adcyap1r1</i> Expression in Nucleus Accumbens Is Associated With Genetic Predisposition of Sex-Specific QTL for Alcohol Consumption on Rat Chromosome 4. | Spence JP et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| HMGB1/IL-1Ξ² complexes in plasma microvesicles modulate immune responses to burn injury. | Coleman LG et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Innate Immune Signaling and Alcohol Use Disorders. | Coleman LG et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Morphological and functional evidence of increased excitatory signaling in the prelimbic cortex during ethanol withdrawal. | Varodayan FP et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Operant over-responding is more sensitive than reversal learning for revealing behavioral changes after withdrawal from alcohol consumption. | Ray MH et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| Sensorimotor gating deficits in "two-hit" models of schizophrenia risk factors. | Khan A et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| The long-term cognitive consequences of adolescent exposure to recreational drugs of abuse. | Mooney-Leber SM et al. | β | 2018 | β |
| The role of the orbitofrontal cortex in alcohol use, abuse, and dependence. | Moorman DE | β | 2018 | β |
| Adolescent binge alcohol exposure increases risk assessment behaviors in male Wistar rats after exposure to an acute psychological stressor in adulthood. | Torcaso A et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Adolescent binge-pattern alcohol exposure alters genome-wide DNA methylation patterns in the hypothalamus of alcohol-naΓ―ve male offspring. | Asimes A et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Adolescent but not adult ethanol binge drinking modulates cocaine withdrawal symptoms in mice. | Ledesma JC et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Adolescent intermittent ethanol reduces serotonin expression in the adult raphe nucleus and upregulates innate immune expression that is prevented by exercise. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Adult rat cortical thickness changes across age and following adolescent intermittent ethanol treatment. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Alcohol's Effects on the Brain: Neuroimaging Results in Humans and Animal Models. | Zahr NM et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Binge-Like Alcohol Exposure During Adolescence Disrupts Dopaminergic Neurotransmission in the Adult Prelimbic Cortex. | Trantham-Davidson H et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Chronic Ethanol During Adolescence Impacts Corticolimbic Dendritic Spines and Behavior. | Jury NJ et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Chronic intermittent ethanol exposure leads to alterations in brain-derived neurotrophic factor within the frontal cortex and impaired behavioral flexibility in both adolescent and adult rats. | Fernandez GM et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| How Should Remote Clinical Monitoring Be Used to Treat Alcohol Use Disorders?: Initial Findings From an Expert Round Table Discussion. | Gordon A et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Intermittent Ethanol during Adolescence Leads to Lasting Behavioral Changes in Adulthood and Alters Gene Expression and Histone Methylation in the PFC. | Wolstenholme JT et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| PACAP Protects the Adolescent and Adult Mice Brain from Ethanol Toxicity and Modulates Distinct Sets of Genes Regulating Similar Networks. | Lacaille H et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| The role of neuroimmune signaling in alcoholism. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| The Transitional Age Brain: "The Best of Times and the Worst of Times". | Chung WW et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Toll-like receptor signaling and stages of addiction. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2017 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol exposure decreased sensitivity to nicotine in adult Wistar rats. | Boutros N et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Adolescent Alcohol Exposure Persistently Impacts Adult Neurobiology and Behavior. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Adolescent binge-like alcohol alters sensitivity to acute alcohol effects on dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens of adult rats. | Shnitko TA et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| A history of adolescent binge drinking in humans is associated with impaired self-movement cue processing on manipulatory scale navigation tasks. | Blankenship PA et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Chronic Drinking During Adolescence Predisposes the Adult Rat for Continued Heavy Drinking: Neurotrophin and Behavioral Adaptation after Long-Term, Continuous Ethanol Exposure. | Fernandez GM et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Consequences of adolescent use of alcohol and other drugs: Studies using rodent models. | Spear LP | β | 2016 | β |
| Diffusion tensor imaging reveals adolescent binge ethanol-induced brain structural integrity alterations in adult rats that correlate with behavioral dysfunction. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Epigenetic and gene expression changes in the adolescent brain: What have we learned from animal models? | Mychasiuk R et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Long-Lasting Effects of Chronic Intermittent Alcohol Exposure in Adolescent Mice on Object Recognition and Hippocampal Neuronal Activity. | Beaudet G et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Memory Systems and the Addicted Brain. | Goodman J et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| Reversal learning and experimenter-administered chronic intermittent ethanol exposure in male rats. | Badanich KA et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| The impact of ADHD persistence, recent cannabis use, and age of regular cannabis use onset on subcortical volume and cortical thickness in young adults. | Lisdahl KM et al. | β | 2016 | β |
| "Boomerang Neuropathology" of Late-Onset Alzheimer's Disease is Shrouded in Harmful "BDDS": Breathing, Diet, Drinking, and Sleep During Aging. | Daulatzai MA | β | 2015 | β |
| Brain pathways to recovery from alcohol dependence. | Cui C et al. | β | 2015 | β |
| Can energy drinks increase the desire for more alcohol? | Marczinski CA | β | 2015 | β |
| Histone Deacetylase Gene Expression Following Binge Alcohol Consumption in Rats and Humans. | LΓ³pez-Moreno JA et al. | β | 2015 | β |
| Neuroimmune Function and the Consequences of Alcohol Exposure. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2015 | β |
| Adolescent binge ethanol treatment alters adult brain regional volumes, cortical extracellular matrix protein and behavioral flexibility. | Coleman LG et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Adolescent, but not adult, binge ethanol exposure leads to persistent global reductions of choline acetyltransferase expressing neurons in brain. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Adolescent intermittent ethanol exposure is associated with increased risky choice and decreased dopaminergic and cholinergic neuron markers in adult rats. | Boutros N et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Adolescents and alcohol: acute sensitivities, enhanced intake, and later consequences. | Spear LP | β | 2014 | β |
| Changes in gene expression within the extended amygdala following binge-like alcohol drinking by adolescent alcohol-preferring (P) rats. | McBride WJ et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Current hypotheses on the mechanisms of alcoholism. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Drug abuse and the neurovascular unit. | Egleton RD et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Ectopic hippocampal neurogenesis in adolescent male rats following alcohol dependence. | McClain JA et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Effects of ethanol exposure during adolescence or in adulthood on Pavlovian conditioned approach in Sprague-Dawley rats. | McClory AJ et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Effects of voluntary alcohol intake on risk preference and behavioral flexibility during rat adolescence. | McMurray MS et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| GABAergic contributions to alcohol responsivity during adolescence: insights from preclinical and clinical studies. | Silveri MM | β | 2014 | β |
| Higher long-lasting ethanol sensitization after adolescent ethanol exposure in mice. | Quoilin C et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Long-term effects of peripubertal binge EtOH exposure on hippocampal microRNA expression in the rat. | Prins SA et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Neuroimmune basis of alcoholic brain damage. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Role of hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor in mediating alcohol-induced activation of the rat hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. | Rivier C | β | 2014 | β |
| The Effect of mGluR5 Antagonism During Binge Drinkingon Subsequent Ethanol Intake in C57BL/6J Mice: Sex- and Age-Induced Differences. | Cozzoli DK et al. | β | 2014 | β |
| Adolescent alcohol exposure alters the rat adult hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responsiveness in a sex-specific manner. | Logrip ML et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Alcohol intoxications during adolescence increase motivation for alcohol in adult rats and induce neuroadaptations in the nucleus accumbens. | Alaux-Cantin S et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Brain structure in adolescents and young adults with alcohol problems: systematic review of imaging studies. | Welch KA et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Chronic alcohol produces neuroadaptations to prime dorsal striatal learning. | DePoy L et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Consequences of ethanol exposure on cued and contextual fear conditioning and extinction differ depending on timing of exposure during adolescence or adulthood. | Broadwater M et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Dare to delay? The impacts of adolescent alcohol and marijuana use onset on cognition, brain structure, and function. | Lisdahl KM et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Effects of acute or chronic ethanol exposure during adolescence on behavioral inhibition and efficiency in a modified water maze task. | Acheson SK et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Effects of intoxicating free-choice alcohol consumption during adolescence on drinking and impulsivity during adulthood in selectively bred high-alcohol preferring mice. | O'Tousa DS et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Effects of voluntary access to sweetened ethanol during adolescence on intake in adulthood. | Broadwater M et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Genetic and neurophysiological correlates of the age of onset of alcohol use disorders in adolescents and young adults. | Chorlian DB et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Increased receptor for advanced glycation end product expression in the human alcoholic prefrontal cortex is linked to adolescent drinking. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Recent binge drinking predicts smaller cerebellar volumes in adolescents. | Lisdahl KM et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| The effects of abused drugs on adolescent development of corticolimbic circuitry and behavior. | Gulley JM et al. | β | 2013 | β |
| Adolescent binge drinking increases expression of the danger signal receptor agonist HMGB1 and Toll-like receptors in the adult prefrontal cortex. | Vetreno RP et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| Association between binge drinking, type of friends and gender: a cross-sectional study among Brazilian adolescents. | Zarzar PM et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| Attenuation of oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and apoptosis by curcumin prevents cognitive deficits in rats postnatally exposed to ethanol. | Tiwari V et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| Chronic ethanol exposure during adolescence alters the behavioral responsiveness to ethanol in adult mice. | Quoilin C et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| Immune function genes, genetics, and the neurobiology of addiction. | Crews FT | β | 2012 | β |
| Postnatal day 7 ethanol treatment causes persistent reductions in adult mouse brain volume and cortical neurons with sex specific effects on neurogenesis. | Coleman LG et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| The neurobiology of binge-like ethanol drinking: evidence from rodent models. | Sprow GM et al. | β | 2012 | β |
| Addiction, adolescence, and innate immune gene induction. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2011 | β |
| Induction of innate immune genes in brain create the neurobiology of addiction. | Crews FT et al. | β | 2011 | β |
| Periadolescent ethanol exposure reduces adult forebrain ChAT+IR neurons: correlation with behavioral pathology. | Ehlers CL et al. | β | 2011 | β |