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Cue-alcohol associative learning in female rats.

Author(s): Cofresí RU, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA, Lee HJ

The ability of environmental cues to trigger alcohol-seeking behaviors is believed to facilitate problematic alcohol use. We previously showed that the development of this cue-evoked alcohol approach reflects cue-alcohol learning and memory in the adult mal...

Article GUID: 31002878

Alcohol-associated antecedent stimuli elicit alcohol seeking in non-dependent rats and may activate the insula.

Author(s): Cofresí RU, Grote DJ, Le EVT, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA, Lee HJ

Alcohol. 2019 May;76:91-102 Authors: Cofresí RU, Grote DJ, Le EVT, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA, Lee HJ

Article GUID: 30612041

Postretrieval Extinction Attenuates Alcohol Cue Reactivity in Rats.

Author(s): Cofresí RU, Lewis SM, Chaudhri N, Lee HJ, Monfils MH, Gonzales RA

Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2017 03;41(3):608-617 Authors: Cofresí RU, Lewis SM, Chaudhri N, Lee HJ, Monfils MH, Gonzales RA

Article GUID: 28169439

Characterizing conditioned reactivity to sequential alcohol-predictive cues in well-trained rats.

Author(s): Cofresí RU, Lee HJ, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA

Alcohol. 2018 Jun;69:41-49 Authors: Cofresí RU, Lee HJ, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA

Article GUID: 29635111


Title:Cue-alcohol associative learning in female rats.
Authors:Cofresí RUMonfils MHChaudhri NGonzales RALee HJ
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31002878
DOI:10.1016/j.alcohol.2019.03.003
Category:Alcohol
PMID:31002878
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 The University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Neuroscience, Austin, TX, 78712, United States; The University of Texas at Austin, College of Pharmacy, Division of Pharmacology & Toxicology, Psychology, Austin, TX, 78712, United States.
2 The University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Neuroscience, Austin, TX, 78712, United States; The University of Texas at Austin, College of Liberal Arts, Department of Psychology, Austin, TX, 78712, United States.
3 Concordia University, Department of Psychology, Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Montreal, Quebec, H4B1R6, Canada.
4 The University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Neuroscience, Austin, TX, 78712, United States; The University of Texas at Austin, College of Liberal Arts, Department of Psychology, Austin, TX, 78712, United States. Electronic address: leehj@austin.utexas.edu.

Description:

Cue-alcohol associative learning in female rats.

Alcohol. 2019 12; 81:1-9

Authors: Cofresí RU, Monfils MH, Chaudhri N, Gonzales RA, Lee HJ

Abstract

The ability of environmental cues to trigger alcohol-seeking behaviors is believed to facilitate problematic alcohol use. We previously showed that the development of this cue-evoked alcohol approach reflects cue-alcohol learning and memory in the adult male rat; however, we do not know whether the same is true for similarly aged female rats. Consequently, adult Long-Evans female rats were allowed to drink unsweetened alcohol in the home cage (Monday, Wednesday, Friday; 24-h two-bottle choice; 5 weeks) and were subsequently split into two experimental groups: Paired and Unpaired. Groups were matched for ingested doses and alcohol bottle preference across the pre-conditioning home cage period. Both groups were trained in conditioning chambers using a Pavlovian procedure. For the Paired group, the chamber houselight was illuminated to signal access to an alcohol sipper. Houselight onset was yoked for the Unpaired group, but access to the alcohol sipper was scheduled to occur only during the intervening periods (in the absence of light). We found that in the Paired, but not Unpaired group, an alcohol approach reaction was conditioned to houselight illumination, and the level of cue-conditioned reactivity predicted drinking behavior within trials. Groups experienced equivalently low but non-negligible blood alcohol concentrations over the course of conditioning sessions. We conclude that cue-triggered alcohol-seeking behavior in adult female rats reflects associative learning about the relationship between alcohol availability and houselight illumination.

PMID: 31002878 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]