APA
Peñasco, Sara & Rico Barrio, Irantzu & Puente, Nagore & Fontaine, Christine J. & Ramos, Almudena & Reguero, Leire & Gerrikagoitia, Inmaculada & Rodríguez de Fonseca, Fernando & Suarez, Juan & Barrondo, Sergio & Aretxabala, Xabier & García del Caño, Gontzal & Sallés, Joan & Elezgarai, Izaskun & Nahirney, Patrick C. & Christie, Brian R. & Grandes, Pedro (2020 ) .Intermittent ethanol exposure during adolescence impairs cannabinoid type 1 receptor-dependent long-term depression and recognition memory in adult mice.
ISO 690
Peñasco, Sara & Rico Barrio, Irantzu & Puente, Nagore & Fontaine, Christine J. & Ramos, Almudena & Reguero, Leire & Gerrikagoitia, Inmaculada & Rodríguez de Fonseca, Fernando & Suarez, Juan & Barrondo, Sergio & Aretxabala, Xabier & García del Caño, Gontzal & Sallés, Joan & Elezgarai, Izaskun & Nahirney, Patrick C. & Christie, Brian R. & Grandes, Pedro. 2020 .Intermittent ethanol exposure during adolescence impairs cannabinoid type 1 receptor-dependent long-term depression and recognition memory in adult mice.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/45190
Resumen:
Binge drinking is a significant problem in adolescent populations, and because of the reciprocal interactions between ethanol
(EtOH) consumption and the endocannabinoid (eCB) system, we sought to determine if adolescent EtOH intake altered the
localization and function of the cannabinoid 1 (CB1) receptors in the adult brain. Adolescent mice were exposed to a 4-day-per
week drinking in the dark (DID) procedure for a total of 4 weeks and then tested after a 2-week withdrawal period. Field excitatory
postsynaptic potentials (fEPSPs), evoked by medial perforant path (MPP) stimulation in the dentate gyrus molecular layer (DGML),
were significantly smaller. Furthermore, unlike control animals, CB1 receptor activation did not depress fEPSPs in the EtOH-exposed
animals. We also examined a form of excitatory long-term depression that is dependent on CB1 receptors (eCB-eLTD) and found
that it was completely lacking in the animals that consumed EtOH during adolescence. Histological analyses indicated that
adolescent EtOH intake significantly reduced the CB1 receptor distribution and proportion of immunopositive excitatory synaptic
terminals in the medial DGML. Furthermore, there was decreased binding of [35S]guanosine-5*-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) ([35S] GTP¿S)
and the guanine nucleotide-binding (G) protein G¿i2 subunit in the EtOH-exposed animals. Associated with this, there was a
significant increase in monoacylglycerol lipase (MAGL) mRNA and protein in the hippocampus of EtOH-exposed animals.
Conversely, deficits in eCB-eLTD and recognition memory could be rescued by inhibiting MAGL with JZL184. These findings
indicate that repeated exposure to EtOH during adolescence leads to long-term deficits in CB1 receptor expression, eCB-eLTD, and
reduced recognition memory, but that these functional deficits can be restored by treatments that increase endogenous 2-
arachidonoylglycerol.