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Social and environmental enrichment has different effects on ethanol and sucrose consumption in mice
Author(s) -
Holgate Joan Y.,
Garcia Hilary,
Chatterjee Susmita,
Bartlett Selena E.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2162-3279
DOI - 10.1002/brb3.767
Subject(s) - sucrose , ethanol , preference , alcohol , food science , environmental enrichment , affect (linguistics) , consumption (sociology) , psychological intervention , psychology , chemistry , environmental health , biochemistry , biology , medicine , endocrinology , communication , psychiatry , social science , sociology , economics , microeconomics
Background Factors leading to the harmful consumption of substances, like alcohol and sucrose, involve a complex interaction of genes and the environment. While we cannot control the genes we inherit, we can modify our environment. Understanding the role that social and environmental experiences play in alcohol and sucrose consumption is critical for developing preventative interventions and treatments for alcohol use disorders and obesity. Methods We used the drinking in the dark two‐bottle choice (2 BC ) model of ethanol and sucrose consumption to compare male C57 BL /6 mice housed in the IntelliCage (an automated device capable of simultaneously measuring behaviors of up to 16 mice living in an enriched social environment) with mice housed in standard isolated and social environments. Results Consistent with previous publications on ethanol‐naïve and ‐experienced mice, social and environmental enrichment reduced ethanol preference. Isolated mice had the highest ethanol preference and IntelliCage mice the least, regardless of prior ethanol experience. In mice with no prior sucrose experience, the addition of social and environmental enrichment increased sucrose preference. However, moving isolated mice to enriched conditions did not affect sucrose preference in sucrose‐experienced mice. Conclusions The impact of social and environmental enrichment on ethanol consumption differs from sucrose consumption suggesting that interventions and treatments developed for alcohol use disorders may not be suitable for sucrose consumption disorders.

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