# Frontolimbic circuitry, behavioral flexibility, and adolescent alcohol history

> **NIH NIH P60** · UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL · 2021 · $262,321

## Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract
Learning to respond automatically to stimuli in the environment allows individuals to operate efficiently under
stable conditions. However, under changing conditions, the ability to flexibly override automatic responses is
essential for optimizing behavior. Our preliminary data from the previous funding cycle suggest that adolescent
alcohol exposure impairs behavioral flexibility, with effects persisting into adulthood. Specifically, we find that
binge drinking during human adolescence is associated with heightened sensitivity of the attention system to
reward-associated cues. Similarly, adolescent intermittent ethanol (AIE) exposure in rats results in enhanced
approach to reward-associated cues. Currently, we don’t know whether these forms of behavioral inflexibility
are related to the tendency to express habitual actions that are relatively inflexible and associated with chronic
alcohol exposure. Furthermore, we don’t know whether either behavioral tendency correlates with the hypo-
frontal connectivity also associated with AIE, nor whether manipulation of frontal circuits can modulate these
forms of behavioral flexibility. Answering these questions is critically important, as habitual responses to
reward-associated cues may facilitate compulsive alcohol use and contribute to relapse among people with
alcohol use disorders (AUDs). Replacing habitual responses to alcohol cues with new actions yielding better
outcomes is a key element of recovery from AUDs. While we know much about the neural regulation of
habitual versus goal-directed responding, particularly in animal models, and we have some idea about the
effects of adult alcohol exposure, we understand much less about the impact of adolescent alcohol exposure
on such behavioral flexibility. We propose a unique translational approach to probe the neurobiological bases
of the ability to form and to flexibly overcome automatic actions and to evaluate theoretically based
interventions to bidirectionally modulate behavioral flexibility. Our core hypothesis, supported by our
preliminary data, is that adolescent binge alcohol exposure promotes both an overreliance on stimulus-
response (S-R) action selection strategy (habit) and hypersensitivity to reward conditioning in adulthood via
common alterations in shared underlying neural circuits. Moreover, the relationship between reliance on habit
and sensitivity to reward conditioning is mediated by neural circuit changes impairing top-down control of
responses to salient exogenous cues. We now propose to use resting-state fMRI to identify differences in brain
circuit function associated with impairment in overriding automatic S-R associations and sensitivity to reward
conditioning. We will also test whether bidirectional manipulation of frontal cortex can promote or reduce top-
down control over behavior, thereby ameliorating or mimicking the impairment associated with adolescent
alcohol exposure. This work will identify objec...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10078814
- **Project number:** 5P60AA011605-24
- **Recipient organization:** UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL
- **Principal Investigator:** Charlotte A. Boettiger
- **Activity code:** P60 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $262,321
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** — → —

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10078814

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10078814, Frontolimbic circuitry, behavioral flexibility, and adolescent alcohol history (5P60AA011605-24). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10078814. Licensed CC0.

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