Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Sep 2024)

Linalool-rich rosewood essential oil (Aniba rosaeodora Ducke) mitigates emotional and neurochemical impairments induced by ethanol binge-like exposure during adolescence in female rats

  • Éverton Renan Quaresma dos Santos,
  • Lucas Villar Pedrosa da Silva Pantoja,
  • Sarah Viana Farias,
  • Bruno Gonçalves Pinheiro,
  • Eloisa Helena A. Andrade,
  • Paulo Fernando Santos Mendes,
  • Jorddy Neves Cruz,
  • Marta Chagas Monteiro,
  • Kelly Davis,
  • Rafael Rodrigues Lima,
  • Jofre Jacob da Silva Freitas,
  • Rommel Mário Rodríguez Burbano,
  • Rui Daniel Prediger,
  • Enéas Andrade Fontes-Junior,
  • José Guilherme S. Maia,
  • Cristiane do Socorro Ferraz Maia

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 178
p. 117120

Abstract

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Linalool-rich Rosewood oil (Aniba rosaeodora Ducke) is a natural compound widely used in perfumery industry. Evidence suggests that linalool exerts antidepressant and anxiolytic effects. Conversely, ethanol binge drinking (i.e., intermittent and episodic consumption) during adolescence elicits neurobehavioral alterations associated with brain damage. Here, we investigated whether linalool-rich Rosewood oil administration can improve the emotional and molecular impairments associated with ethanol binge-like exposure during adolescence in female rats. Rosewood oil was obtained by hydrodistillation and posteriorly analyzed. Adolescent female Wistar rats received four-cycles of ethanol binge-like pattern (3 g/kg/day, 3 days on/4 days off) and daily Rosewood oil (35 mg/kg, intranasally) for 28 days. Twenty-four hours after treatments, it was evaluated the impact of ethanol exposure and Rosewood oil treatment on the putative emotional impairments assessed on the splash and forced swimming tests, as well as the levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), S100B, oxidative parameters, and inflammatory cytokines in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Results indicated that Rosewood oil intranasal administration mitigated emotional impairments induced by ethanol exposure accompanied by a marked increase in BDNF, S100B, glutathione (GSH), and antioxidant activity equivalent to Trolox (TEAC) levels in brain areas. Rosewood oil treatment also prevented the ethanol-induced increase of interleukin-1β, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), and neurofilament light chain (NFL) levels. These findings provide the first evidence that Rosewood oil intranasal administration exerts protective effects against emotional and molecular impairments associated with adolescent ethanol binge-like exposure, possibly due to linalool actions triggering neurotrophic factors, rebalancing antioxidant status, and attenuating proinflammatory process.

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