Abstract

Ganoderma lucidum, mushroom used for centuries by Asian peoples as food supplement, has been shown interesting biological activities, including over the Central Nervous System. Besides, these mushroom bioactive compounds present antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. On the side, binge drinking paradigm consists of ethanol exposure that reflects the usual consumption of adolescents, which elicits deleterious effects, determined by high ethanol consumption, in a short period. In this study, we investigated whether the Aqueous Extract of G. lucidum (AEGl) reduces the behavioral disorders induced by alcohol. Male (n = 30) and female Wistar rats (n = 40), seventy-two days old, were used for behavioral/biochemical and oral toxicity test, respectively. Animals were exposed to 5 binges (beginning at 35 days old) of ethanol (3 g/kg/day) or distilled water. Twenty-four hours after the last binge administration, animals received AEGl (100 mg/kg/day) or distilled water for three consecutive days. After treatment protocol, open field, elevated plus maze, forced swim, and step-down inhibitory avoidance tests were performed. Oxidative stress parameters were measured to evaluate the REDOX balance. Our results demonstrated that AEGl elicited the recovery of spontaneous horizontal exploration capacity, anxiogenic- and depressive-profile, as well as short-term memory damage induced by binge-ethanol exposure. The behavioral effects of the extract were associated to the reequilibrium of the animals' REDOX balance. Thus, AEGl, a medicinal mushroom, ameliorates behavioral alteration on a model of motor, cognitive and psychiatric-like disorders induced by binge drinking paradigm and emerges as a useful tool as a food supplement in the management of disorders of alcoholic origin.

Highlights

  • Ethanol is a psychoactive drug able to alter several body systems, including the central nervous system (CNS)

  • This study provides the first evidence that Aqueous Extract of G. lucidum (AEGl), a functional food, ameliorates behavioral alteration on a model of psychiatric-like disorders induced by binge drinking paradigm

  • Our results demonstrated the recovery of the spontaneous horizontal exploration capacity of the animals in the Open Field Test (OF) test, as well as extinguished the anxiogenic- and depressive-profile induced by ethanol exposure

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Summary

Introduction

Ethanol is a psychoactive drug able to alter several body systems, including the central nervous system (CNS). The injury mechanisms seem to be related to the pattern of consumption [5, 6]. Binge drinking is a pattern that consists of acute intoxication, i.e., 5 or more doses for men and 4 or more doses for women, during a short period of 2 hours, approximately, reaching a minimum blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 80 mg/dL [6,7,8]. The knowledge of the probable mechanisms that underlie the ethanol tissue damage provides critically the search for alternatives managements to reduce these injuries, since there is still no adequate therapeutic management [11]. A promising alternative would be the use of therapeutic supplementation that consists of the use of bioactive functional foods, since they offer lower health risks and intoxication [12,13,14]

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