Young male and female Sprague-Dawley rats (30 days old) were assigned randomly to three treatment groups: (1) alcohol treatment--received beer with 5% ethanol added, food, and water ad libitum; (2) pair-fed treatment--received nonalcoholic beer plus sucrose and food to match intake by the alcohol-treated animals; and (3) control treatment--received food and water ad libitum. Animals were tested for alcohol preference for 24 hr and then received their assigned treatments for a period of 30 days, followed by a period of abstinence before alcohol preference testing again at 74 days of age. Males given free access to beer and water did not drink large quantities of beer. Females given free access to beer and water drank a lot of beer on the first day, but decreased intake until approximately 52 days of age. A developmental change in young female rats at approximately 52 days of age resulted in increased voluntary ethanol intake, possibly caused by hormonal changes associated with the establishment of estrous cycles. When the animals were tested for alcohol preference at 74 days of age after a period of abstinence, males and females in the pair-fed group had greater alcohol preference than animals in the other groups. Females in the pair-fed group had greater alcohol intake based on body weight than males in the pair-fed group and males and females in all other groups. These results provide insight into sex differences in the development of voluntary drinking behavior and responses of drinking behavior to the early stress of pair-feeding.
Gender differences in alcohol intake and response to alcohol may be influenced by basic variations in the organization and modulation of male and female brains. Although a number of genetic, social, environmental, and metabolic factors have been proposed to explain the gender differences observed in risk for alcoholism, alcohol intake, and medical consequences of excessive alcohol intake, very little attention has been given to the role of gender differences in the brain regarding alcohol use. Recent evidence documents the influence of neurosteroids on neurotransmitter activity in the brain and the impact of alcohol on neurosteroid levels. Neurosteroids are found in different levels in males and females during development and throughout life, depending on factors such as age, stage of development, estrous and menstrual cycles, and stress. This study discusses the hypothesis that many of the gender differences observed concerning alcohol use and misuse are determined by gender differences in the brain, which in turn differentially influence the behavioral and neurochemical responses of males and females to alcohol.
The dissociation between dopamine and ethanol levels may reflect the development of acute tolerance to ethanol-induced dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens within the time course of a single acute injection. Given the strong links between dopamine and ethanol reinforcement, our findings may be relevant for understanding the time course of ethanol's reinforcing effects in vivo.
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