Abstract

Prenatal ethanol exposure causes a persistent reduction in the spontaneous electrical activity of dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) in adult animals. Because DA neuron activity matures into adult pattern during postnatal development, it is possible that reduced activity in VTA DA neurons after prenatal ethanol exposure is caused by impaired postnatal development. This possibility was investigated in the present study using the in vivo extracellular single-unit recording and brain stimulation techniques. The results show an age-dependent decrease in the number of spontaneously active VTA DA neurons from 2 to 4 weeks of age in both the control and prenatal ethanol-exposed animals. In ethanol-exposed animals, the age-dependent decrease was more prominent after 3 weeks of age, resulting in lower numbers of spontaneously active VTA DA neurons in 4-week-old and adult animals. In both the control and ethanol-exposed animals, there were age-dependent increases in the firing rates and burst firing activity of VTA DA neurons after 2 weeks of age. Ethanol exposure led to slightly lower firing rates in 4-week-old and adult animals and did not impact the burst firing pattern in any age groups. There were no changes in axon conduction velocity and antidromic spike characteristics of VTA DA neurons. These results indicate that reduced activity of VTA DA neurons during adulthood after prenatal ethanol exposure does not begin prenatally. Instead, it is a result of impaired postnatal development manifested only when animals reach 4 weeks of age. These results suggest that early intervention may be an effective treatment strategy for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, a behavioral dysfunction related to the abnormalities of DA systems and often observed in children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

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