Background
The GABAergic neuroactive steroid (3α,5α)-3-hydroxy-pregnan-20-one (3α,5α-THP, allopregnanolone) has been studied during withdrawal from ethanol in humans, rats and mice. Serum 3α,5α-THP levels decreased and brain levels were not altered following acute ethanol administration (2 g/kg) in male C57BL/6J mice, however the effects of chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) exposure on 3α,5α-THP levels have not been examined. Given that CIE exposure changes subsequent voluntary ethanol drinking in a time-dependent fashion following repeated cycles of ethanol exposure, we conducted a time-course analysis of CIE effects on 3α,5α-THP levels in specific brain regions known to influence drinking behavior.
Methods
Adult male C57BL/6J mice were exposed to four cycles of CIE to induce ethanol dependence. All mice were sacrificed and perfused at one of two time points, 8 hr or 72 hr following the final exposure cycle. Free floating brain sections (40 μm; 3-5 sections/region/animal) were immunostained and analyzed to determine relative levels of cellular 3α,5α-THP.
Results
Withdrawal from CIE exposure produced time-dependent and region-specific effects on immunohistochemical detection of 3α,5α-THP levels across cortical and limbic brain regions. A transient reduction in 3α,5α-THP immunoreactivity was observed in the central nucleus of the amygdala 8 hr after withdrawal from CIE (-31.4 ± 9.3). Decreases in 3α,5α-THP immunoreactivity were observed 72 hr following withdrawal in the medial prefrontal cortex (−25.0 ± 9.3%), nucleus accumbens core (−29.9 ± 6.6%), and dorsolateral striatum (−18.5 ± 6.0%), while an increase was observed in the CA3 pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampus (+42.8 ± 19.5%). Sustained reductions in 3α,5α-THP immunoreactivity were observed at both time points in the lateral amygdala (8 hr −28.3 ± 12.8%; 72 hr −27.5 ± 12.4%) and in the ventral tegmental area (8 hr −26.5 ± 9.9%; 72 hr −31.6 ± 13.8%).
Conclusions
These data suggest that specific neuroadaptations in 3α,5α-THP levels may be present in regions of brain that mediate anxiety, stress and reinforcement relevant to ethanol dependence. The changes that occur at different time points likely modulate neurocircuitry involved in ethanol withdrawal as well as the elevated drinking observed after CIE exposure.