JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, N.I.H., EXTRAMURAL
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Sex differences in responses of the basolateral-central amygdala circuit to alcohol, corticosterone and their interaction.

Neuropharmacology 2017 March 2
Alcohol use disorders are chronically relapsing conditions that pose significant health challenges for our society. Stress is a prevalent trigger of relapse, particularly for women, yet the mechanisms by which alcohol and stress interact, and how this differs between males and females, remain poorly understood. The glutamatergic circuit connecting the basolateral (BLA) and central (CeA) nuclei of the amygdala is a likely locus for such adaptations, yet the impact of alcohol, corticosterone and their interaction on this circuit has been understudied. In particular, no studies have addressed sex differences in these effects or potential differential responses between the lateral and medial subdivisions of the central nucleus. Thus, we assessed the effects of alcohol and corticosterone treatments on BLA-evoked compound glutamatergic responses in medial and lateral CeA neurons from male and female rats. We observed minimal differences between medial and lateral CeA responses to alcohol and corticosterone in male rats, which were primarily sensitive to alcohol-induced inhibition of glutamatergic postsynaptic potentials. Unlike male neurons, cells from female rats displayed reduced sensitivity to alcohol's inhibitory effects. In addition, female neurons diverged in their sensitivity to corticosterone, with lateral CeA neuronal responses significantly blunted following corticosterone treatment and medial CeA neurons largely unchanged by corticosterone or subsequent co-application of alcohol. Together these data highlight striking differences in how male and female amygdala respond to alcohol and the stress hormone corticosterone, factors which may impact differential susceptibility of the sexes to alcohol- and stress-related disorders.

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