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  6. Acute Ethanol Impairs Photic and Nonphotic Circadian Phase Resetting in the Syrian Hamster
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Acute Ethanol Impairs Photic and Nonphotic Circadian Phase Resetting in the Syrian Hamster

Source Publication
American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
Date Issued
January 1, 2009
Author(s)
Prosser, Rebecca  
Ruby, Christina L.
DePaul, Marc A.
Roberts, Randy J.
Glass, J. David
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.90782.2008
Link to full text
http://ajpregu.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/296/2/R411?maxtoshow=&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=prosser&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/15557
Abstract

Disrupted circadian rhythmicity is associated with ethanol (EtOH) abuse, yet little is known about how EtOH affects the mammalian circadian clock of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Clock timing is regulated by photic and nonphotic inputs to the SCN involving glutamate release from the retinohypothalamic tract and serotonin (5-HT) from the midbrain raphe, respectively. Our recent in vitro studies in the SCN slice revealed that EtOH blocks photic phase-resetting action of glutamate and enhances the nonphotic phase-resetting action of the 5-HT1A,7 agonist, 8-OH-DPAT. To explore the basis of these effects in the whole animal, we used microdialysis to characterize the pharmacokinetics of intraperitoneal injection of EtOH in the hamster SCN extracellular fluid compartment and then studied the effects of such EtOH treatment on photic and serotonergic phase resetting of the circadian locomotor activity rhythm. Peak EtOH levels (~50 mM) from a 2 g/kg injection occurred within 20–40 min with a half-life of ~3 h. EtOH treatment dose-dependently attenuated photic phase advances but had no effect on phase delays and, contrary to in vitro findings, markedly attenuated 8-OH-DPAT-induced phase advances. In a complementary experiment using reverse microdialysis to deliver a timed SCN perfusion of EtOH during a phase-advancing light pulse, the phase advances were blocked, similar to systemic EtOH treatment. These results are evidence that acute EtOH significantly affects photic and nonphotic phase-resetting responses critical to circadian clock regulation. Notably, EtOH inhibition of photic signaling is manifest through direct action in the SCN. Such actions could underlie the disruption of circadian rhythmicity associated with alcohol abuse.

Subjects

suprachiasmatic nucle...

Disciplines
Biochemistry
Cell Biology
Molecular Biology
Recommended Citation
Christina L. Ruby, Rebecca A. Prosser, Marc A. DePaul, Randy J. Roberts, and J. David Glass Acute ethanol impairs photic and nonphotic circadian phase resetting in the Syrian hamster Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 296: R411-R418, 2009. First published doi:10.1152/ajpregu.90782.2008
Submission Type
Publisher's Version
Embargo Date
June 11, 2010
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

ruby_et_al_2009_acute_ethanol_impairs_photic_and_nonphotic_circadian_phase_resetting_in_the_syrian_hamster.pdf

Size

1.02 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

7d409d5db228eaef8a93dfae99904cc2

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