Abstract

We and others previously reported that paternal preconception chronic ethanol exposure leads to molecular, physiological, and behavioral changes in offspring including reduced ethanol consumption and preference relative to controls. The goal of the present study was to further explore the impact of paternal ethanol exposure on a wide variety of basal and drug-induced behavioral responses in first generation offspring. Adult male mice were exposed to chronic intermittent vapor ethanol or control conditions for 5–6 weeks before being mated with ethanol-naïve females to produce ethanol (E)- and control (C)-sired offspring. E-sired male offspring showed stress hyporesponsivity in a stress-induced hyperthermia assay and E-sired female offspring had reduced binge-like ethanol consumption in a drinking in the dark assay compared to C-sired offspring. E-sired offspring also showed altered sensitivity to a sedative/hypnotic dose of the GABAergic drug midazolam, but not ketamine or ethanol, in a loss of the righting response assay. E-sired offspring did not differ from controls in marble burying, novel object location, novel object recognition, social interaction, bottle-brush, novelty suppressed feeding, prepulse inhibition, every-other-day ethanol drinking, or home cage activity assays. This study adds to a growing body of literature suggesting that like in utero alcohol exposure, paternal preconception alcohol exposure can also have effects that persist and impact behavior of offspring.

Highlights

  • Alcohol use is an integral part of the lifestyle of many individuals and alcohol abuse is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States [1]

  • Bonferroni post-hoc testing revealed that both C- and E-sired offspring showed a preference (p < 0.001) for the displaced object during the test session as compared to the training session, indicating that object location memory was not influenced by paternal preconception ethanol exposure

  • We investigated the intergenerational effects of two chronic preconception ethanol (PPE) paradigms on a wide variety of behavioral in adult offspring

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol use is an integral part of the lifestyle of many individuals and alcohol abuse is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States [1]. Only three medications are approved for alcohol dependence or prevention of relapse by the United Stated Food and Drug Administration: Disulfiram, naltrexone, and acamprosate [3,4]. These medications are underprescribed and none are effective in a high percentage of patients [5]. Brain Sci. 2020, 10, 658; doi:10.3390/brainsci10090658 www.mdpi.com/journal/brainsci. Given the high prevalence of alcohol consumption in men [10], more research in this area is warranted to understand the intergenerational effects of paternal preconception alcohol use on offspring health and behavior

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