Sex differences in binge alcohol drinking and the behavioral consequences of protracted abstinence in C57BL/6J mice

TitleSex differences in binge alcohol drinking and the behavioral consequences of protracted abstinence in C57BL/6J mice
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsRivera-Irizarry JK, Zallar LJ, Levine OB, Skelly MJane, Boyce JE, Barney T, Kopyto R, Pleil KE
JournalBiol Sex Differ
Volume14
Issue1
Pagination83
Date Published2023 Nov 13
ISSN2042-6410
KeywordsAlcohol Drinking, Alcoholism, Animals, Binge Drinking, Ethanol, Female, Humans, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Sex Characteristics, Water
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Binge alcohol drinking is a risk factor linked to numerous disease states including alcohol use disorder (AUD). While men binge drink more alcohol than women, this demographic gap is quickly shrinking, and preclinical studies demonstrate that females consistently consume more alcohol than males. Further, women are at increased risk for the co-expression of AUD with neuropsychiatric diseases such as anxiety and mood disorders. However, little is understood about chronic voluntary alcohol drinking and its long-term effects on behavior. Here, we sought to characterize sex differences in chronic binge drinking and the effects of protracted alcohol abstinence on anxiety- and affective-related behaviors in males and females.

METHODS: We assessed binge alcohol drinking patterns in male and female C57BL/6J mice using a modified Drinking in the Dark (DID) paradigm in which mice received home cage access to one bottle of 10% or 20% alcohol (EtOH) or water for 2 h per day on Days 1-3 and to two bottles (EtOH/H2O + H2O) for 24 h on Day 4 for 8 weekly cycles. Mice were then tested for the effects of protracted abstinence on avoidance, affective, and compulsive behaviors.

RESULTS: Female mice consumed more alcohol than males consistently across cycles of DID and at 2, 4, and 24-h timepoints within the day, with a more robust sex difference for 20% than 10% EtOH. Females also consumed more water than males, an effect that emerged at the later time points; this water consumption bias diminished when alcohol was available. Further, while increased alcohol consumption was correlated with decreased water consumption in males, there was no relationship between these two measures in females. Alcohol preference was higher in 10% vs. 20% EtOH for both sexes. During protracted abstinence following chronic binge drinking, mice displayed decreased avoidance behavior (elevated plus maze, open field, novelty suppressed feeding) and increased compulsive behavior (marble burying) that was especially robust in females. There was no effect of alcohol history on stress coping and negative affective behaviors (sucrose preference, forced swim test, tail suspension) in either sex.

CONCLUSION: Female mice engaged in higher volume binge drinking than their male counterparts. Although females also consumed more water than males, their higher alcohol consumption was not driven by increased total fluid intake. Further, the effects of protracted abstinence following chronic binge drinking was driven by behavioral disinhibition that was more pronounced in females. Given the reciprocal relationship between risk-taking and alcohol use in neuropsychiatric disease states, these results have implications for sex-dependent alcohol drinking patterns and their long-term negative neuropsychiatric/physiological health outcomes in humans.

DOI10.1186/s13293-023-00565-0
Alternate JournalBiol Sex Differ
PubMed ID37957762
PubMed Central IDPMC10644501
Grant ListR00AA023559 / AA / NIAAA NIH HHS / United States
F31 AA029293 / AA / NIAAA NIH HHS / United States
T32 DA039080 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
F31AA029293 / AA / NIAAA NIH HHS / United States
T32DA039080 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
R01AA027645 / AA / NIAAA NIH HHS / United States