Sex differences in response to stress and alcohol abuse
lab animal
Research highlights
Alcohol abuse
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41684-024-01486-0
Sex differences in response to stress and
alcohol abuse
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Alcohol addiction is a widespread mental
health issue, affecting individuals globally.
Males are more prone to showing symptoms
of addiction. In addition, recent research highlights important sex-based differences in alcohol consumption, especially under conditions
of stress. Sex differences are relevant since
disorders like post-traumatic stress disorder
often co-occur with alcohol abuse, but exactly
how stress and alcohol influence behavioral
responses of both sexes is still unclear. A study
in Behavioural Brain Research examines how
chronic ethanol exposure and traumatic stress
impact male and female Wistar rats, using
a Pavlovian fear conditioning paradigm to
analyze avoidance responses to threats.
Researchers first exposed the rats to
ethanol vapor over several days, inducing
Lab Animal | Volume 53 | December 2024 | 358
addiction as shown by withdrawal symptoms.
Following this step, the rats underwent a
single prolonged stress protocol involving
physical restraint and forced swimming to
simulate traumatic stress. After the stress
exposure, the researchers assessed the
rats’ conditioned fear responses and their
capacity for fear extinction. During fear
conditioning, control females displayed
lower freezing levels than males, showing
less passive fear behavior. A similar pattern
emerged during the fear extinction phase,
with females again showing more active
responses. Females displayed smaller alcohol
consumption and fewer withdrawal symptoms
compared to males.
When examining how alcohol and trauma
exposure impacted fear conditioning, results
indicated no major effects on conditioned
fear in either sex. Males exposed only to
alcohol (without a traumatic experience)
demonstrated a more active response compared to control males, exhibiting reduced
freezing behaviors.
Although prior exposure to alcohol and
stress had minimal effects, mice demonstrate
a clear sexual dimorphism in threat responses:
females tend toward active avoidance
strategies, while males exhibit more passive
responses. Recognizing these sex-specific
behavioral responses is essential for designing
future experiments to understand and treat
mental health disorders.
Jorge Ferreira
Original reference: Mayberry, H.K., Rinker, J.A. and Chandler,
L.J. Behav. Brain Res. 477, 115294 (2025)
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