Stress and Brain (Sep 2022)

Behavior-inhibition effects of hippocampal dentate gyrus overactivation after single ethanol vapor

  • Xin-Yue Wang,
  • Jie Li,
  • Wan-Kun Gong,
  • Wei-Jie Xie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26599/SAB.2022.9060018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 111 – 119

Abstract

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Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a common mental disorder that may cause dementia and mood disorders such as anxiety. The dentate gyrus (DG) is a key brain region for dementia as well as anxiety, while the underlying mechanisms of DG-based behavioral impairments induced by ethanol are not fully understood. Here we report the DG-based behavior inhibition using the ethanol vapor exposure procedure combined with behavioral tasks. The results indicate that single ethanol vapor exposure leads to working memory impairments and decreased anxiety-like behaviors 24 h after single ethanol vapor exposure. Notably, the c-Fos staining shows that the hippocampal DG is overactivated by ethanol administration, which implies DG plays a pivotal role in mediating the working memory and anxiety-like behaviors induced by ethanol vapor exposure. This links overactivation effects of ethanol vapor on hippocampal DG functions to ethanol-induced behavior inhibition, suggesting that future studies concerning ethanol-induced cognitive and mood disorders may focus more on the abnormal activity of this brain region.

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