Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic psychiatric disorder with severe societal consequences that impacts over 15 million adults in the USA and 76 million worldwide. Ethanol exposure early in life, particularly in utero, strikingly alters fetal brain development and increases the risk for AUD. Even exposure to low concentrations of ethanol can produce the most prevalent, milder forms of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. Our recent studies in the rat demonstrate that prenatal exposure to low levels of ethanol, in addition to increasing ethanol consumption and anxiety in the offspring, stimulates neurogenesis with negligible cytotoxic effects. Interestingly, prenatal ethanol stimulates the density of neurons expressing hypocretin/orexin (Hcrt), an orexigenic neuropeptide located almost exclusively in the hypothalamus that has a major role in promoting AUD-related behaviors. These compelling effects observed in our rodent model led us to seek a simpler vertebrate model to investigate in real- time, at cellular and anatomical levels, the mechanisms involved in ethanol?s effects on embryonic development of Hcrt neurons. The zebrafish (ZF) is a perfect vertebrate model system for our studies, due to its optical accessibility and external development, its small size and low cost, and its comparable CNS that develops early and rapidly alongside a relatively sophisticated behavioral repertoire. With our recent publications showing a conservation of ethanol?s effects across species, we established in our laboratory a variety of techniques particularly suited for comprehensive studies of the ZF brain, including time-lapse live imaging, optogenetics, calcium imaging, and in vivo targeted laser ablation, and obtained preliminary results revealing robust and unexpected changes in Hcrt neurons and neuroimmune systems that may lead to the formation of specific asymmetric Hcrt subpopulations. Based on these new findings, we propose to test the following hypothesis: Embryonic exposure to ethanol at low doses has diverse effects on the development of Hcrt neurons, which are mediated by dynamic changes in local inflammatory chemokine systems and contribute to the formation of asymmetric, abnormally-located Hcrt subpopulations that exhibit altered neural activity and are causally related to disturbances in ethanol consumption and associated behaviors. In 3 specific aims, we plan in ZF embryonically exposed to low-dose ethanol: 1) to thoroughly characterize Hcrt neuronal development along with behavior, under normal conditions and after ethanol exposure, and directly test the behavioral functions of these neurons; 2) to precisely determine, at a single-cell level, if Hcrt neurons in specific subpopulations are unique in their birth date, site of origin, migratory path, and signaling activity, and if they are causally related to behavioral disturbances; and 3) to test the possibility that effects of embryonic ethanol on Hcrt neuronal development and behavior are mediated by local neuroimmune systems, specifically CXCL12a/CXCR4b/CXCR7b and CCL2/CCR2.
This research aims to elucidate in depth the dynamic and diverse neuropeptide, neuroimmune and behavioral changes caused by low levels of in utero ethanol exposure that increase the risk for AUD.

Public Health Relevance

In utero exposure to ethanol at low doses, known to contribute to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders and increase risk for alcohol use disorders, is shown in rodents to stimulate in the hypothalamus both hypocretin/orexin peptide neurons that play a major role in alcohol intake and abuse and local inflammatory neuroimmune systems. In a transparent zebrafish model, we will use live imaging to characterize, at a single-cell level and in real-time across developmental stages, these effects of embryonic ethanol exposure on this neuropeptide system, test if the observed changes are causally related to disturbances in behavior, and determine if specific inflammatory chemokine systems have a functional role in mediating these lasting neuronal and behavioral disturbances. This research will increase our fundamental understanding of the long-term effects of embryonic ethanol exposure at low levels, creating a stronger foundation for developing improved strategies for prevention or reversal of the serious consequences from maternal consumption of even small amounts of ethanol during pregnancy.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01AA027653-01A1
Application #
9886626
Study Section
Neurotoxicology and Alcohol Study Section (NAL)
Program Officer
Powell, Elizabeth
Project Start
2020-02-15
Project End
2025-01-31
Budget Start
2020-02-15
Budget End
2021-01-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Rockefeller University
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Graduate Schools
DUNS #
071037113
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10065