Exposure to an enriched environment reduces alcohol self-administration in Sardinian alcohol-preferring rats

•Environmental enrichment is known to greatly impact several rodent behaviors•Alcohol-preferring rats were kept under impoverished, standard, and enriched environment•Environmental enrichment slowed acquisition of operant alcohol self-administration•Environmental enrichment reduced the reinforcing a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiology & behavior 2022-05, Vol.249, p.113771-113771, Article 113771
Hauptverfasser: Maccioni, Paola, Bratzu, Jessica, Lobina, Carla, Acciaro, Carla, Corrias, Gianluigi, Capra, Alessandro, Carai, Mauro A.M., Agabio, Roberta, Muntoni, Anna Lisa, Gessa, Gian Luigi, Colombo, Giancarlo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Environmental enrichment is known to greatly impact several rodent behaviors•Alcohol-preferring rats were kept under impoverished, standard, and enriched environment•Environmental enrichment slowed acquisition of operant alcohol self-administration•Environmental enrichment reduced the reinforcing and motivational properties of alcohol•The hedonic properties of environmental enrichment likely replaced those of alcohol Living in an enriched environment (EE) produces a notable impact on several rodent behaviors, including those motivated by drugs of abuse. This picture is somewhat less clear when referring to alcohol-motivated behaviors. With the intent of contributing to this research field with data from one of the few rat lines selectively bred for excessive alcohol consumption, the present study investigated the effect of EE on operant oral alcohol self-administration in Sardinian alcohol-preferring (sP) rats. Starting from Postnatal Day (PND) 21, male sP rats were kept under 3 different housing conditions: impoverished environment (IE; single housing in shoebox-like cages with no environmental enrichment); standard environment (SE; small colony cages with 3 rats and no environmental enrichment); EE (large colony cages with 6 rats and multiple elements of environmental enrichment, including 2 floors, ladders, maze, running wheels, and shelter). From PND 60, rats were exposed to different phases of shaping and training of alcohol self-administration. IE, SE, and EE rats were then compared under (i) fixed ratio (FR) 4 (FR4) schedule of alcohol reinforcement for 20 daily sessions and (ii) progressive ratio (PR) schedule of alcohol reinforcement in a final single session. Acquisition of the lever-responding task (shaping) was slower in EE than IE and SE rats, as the likely consequence of a “devaluation” of the novel stimuli provided by the operant chamber in comparison to those to which EE rats were continuously exposed in their homecage or an alteration, induced by EE, of the rat “emotionality” state when facing the novel environment represented by the operant chamber. Training of alcohol self-administration was slower in EE than IE rats, with SE rats displaying intermediate values. A similar ranking order (IE>SE>EE) was also observed in number of lever-responses for alcohol, amount of self-administered alcohol, and breakpoint for alcohol under FR4 and PR schedules of reinforcement. These data suggest that living in a complex environment reduced the reinfor
ISSN:0031-9384
1873-507X
DOI:10.1016/j.physbeh.2022.113771