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Browsing by Author "Ardinger, Cherish"
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Item Determining the Impact of Repeated Binge Drinking on Corticostriatal Theta Synchrony(2020-12) Ardinger, Cherish; Lapish, Christopher; Grahame, Nicholas; Linsenbardt, DavidThe development of alcohol use disorder (AUD) is believed to involve functional adaptations in corticostriatal projections which regulate the reinforcing properties of ethanol (EtOH). To further our understanding of how repeated EtOH consumption impacts the corticostriatal circuit, extracellular electrophysiological recordings (local field potentials; LFPs) were gathered from the nucleus accumbens and prefrontal cortex of female and male C57BL/6J mice voluntarily consuming EtOH or water using ‘drinking-in-the-dark’ (DID) procedures. Mice were given 15 consecutive days of two-hours of access to EtOH (20% v/v), three hours into the dark cycle while LFPs were recorded. To determine the impact of repeated EtOH consumption on neural activity between these brain regions, theta phase-locking value (PLV, a measure of synchrony) was calculated. Specifically, theta PLV was calculated during active drinking periods (bouts) and average PLV during the first bout was compared to the last bout to determine within session changes in synchrony. Results indicated significantly lower PLV during the last bout than the first bout. Additionally, longer bouts predicted lower PLV during the last bout, but not the first bout when mice were consuming EtOH. These results may suggest that alcohol intoxication decreases corticostriatal synchrony over a drinking period. Results considering changes in theta power spectral density (PSD) indicated an increase in PSD when mice were given access to water during the typical EtOH access time following the 15-day EtOH drinking history. This effect was not seen when mice were drinking water prior to EtOH access and may be indicative of a successive negative contrast effect. This work identifies unique functional characteristics of corticostriatal communication associated with binge-like EtOH intake and sets the stage for identifying the biological mechanisms subserving them.Item Leveraging Whole Brain Imaging to Identify Brain Regions Involved in Alcohol Frontloading(2023-12) Ardinger, Cherish; Lapish, Christopher; Grahame, Nicholas; Czachowski, Cristine; Kimbrough, AdamFrontloading is an alcohol drinking pattern where intake is skewed toward the onset of access. The goal of the current study was to identify brain regions involved in frontloading using whole brain imaging. 63 C57Bl/6J (32 female and 31 male) mice underwent 8 days of binge drinking using drinking-in-the-dark (DID). Three hours into the dark cycle, mice received 20% (v/v) alcohol or water for two hours on days 1-7. Intake was measured in 1-minute bins using volumetric sippers, which facilitated analyses of drinking patterns. Mice were perfused 80 minutes into the day 8 DID session and brains were extracted and processed for iDISCO clearing and c-fos immunohistochemistry. For brain network analyses, day 8 drinking patterns were used to characterize mice as frontloaders or non-frontloaders using a change-point analysis described in our recent ACER publication (Ardinger et al., 2022). Groups were female frontloaders (n = 20), female non-frontloaders (n = 2), male frontloaders (n = 13) and male non-frontloaders (n = 8). There were no differences in total alcohol intake as a function of frontloading status. Water drinkers had an n of 10 for each sex. As only two female mice were characterized as non-frontloaders, it was not possible to construct a functional correlation network for this group. Following light sheet imaging, ClearMap2.1 was used to register brains to the Allen Brain Atlas and detect fos+ cells. Functional correlation matrices were calculated for each group from log10 c-fos values. Euclidean distances were calculated from these R values and hierarchical clustering was used to determine modules (highly connected groups of brain regions) at a tree-cut height of 50%. In males, alcohol access decreased modularity (3 modules in both frontloaders and non-frontloaders) as compared to water drinkers (7 modules). In females, an opposite effect was observed. Alcohol access (9 modules) increased modularity as compared to water drinkers (5 modules). These results suggest sex differences in how alcohol consumption reorganizes the functional architecture of networks. Next, key brain regions in each network were identified. Connector hubs, which primarily facilitate communication between modules, and provincial hubs, which facilitate communication within modules, were of specific interest for their important and differing roles. In males, 4 connector hubs and 17 provincial hubs were uniquely identified in frontloaders (i.e., were brain regions that did not have this status in male non-frontloaders or water drinkers). These represented a group of hindbrain regions (e.g., locus coeruleus and the pontine gray) connected to striatal/cortical regions (e.g., cortical amygdalar area) by the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus. In females, 16 connector and 17 provincial hubs were uniquely identified which were distributed across 8 of the 9 modules in the female alcohol drinker network. Only one brain region (the nucleus raphe pontis) was a connector hub in both sexes, suggesting that frontloading in males and females may be driven by different brain regions. In conclusion, alcohol consumption led to fewer, but more densely connected, groups of brain regions in males but not females, and recruited different hub brain regions between the sexes. These results suggest target brain regions for future studies to try to manipulate frontloading behavior and more broadly contribute to the literature on alcohol’s effect on neural networks.