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A new two-hit animal model for schizophrenia research: Consequences on social behavior
K. Hakenova, A. Mikulecka, K. Holubova, M. Chvojkova, R. Slamberova, J. Jurcovicova, B. Cechova, S. Ponist, J. Horacek, K. Vales
Status not-indexed Language English Country Netherlands
Document type Journal Article
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
from 2021
PubMed Central
from 2021
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
from 2021
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Schizophrenia, a profoundly impactful neuropsychiatric disorder, has been the subject of extensive research using animal models. However, certain important aspects remain understudied, including assumed long-term consequences of psychotic episodes on negative symptoms development and progression. Addressing these limitations, we proposed a novel animal model in male rats based on early postnatal immune activation triggered by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), serving as the predisposing factor (1st hit). As the 2nd hit, representing psychotic-like episodes, we implemented a multi-episodic co-treatment with dizocilpine (MK-801) and amphetamine (AMP), spanning multiple developmental periods. The animals were tested in two social behavioral assays in adolescence and adulthood to investigate whether a social deficit would arise. In addition, we evaluated the level of oxytocin (OT), a neuropeptide relevant to social behavior, in selected brain regions. In the social interaction test, when animals could freely interact in the open field and express their social behavioral profile entirely, social behavior decreased in adolescent experimental animals. In the social approach test in the Y maze, all animals, irrespective of treatment, preferred conspecific over an indifferent object and novel rat over a familiar rat. Further, the results revealed that the OT content in the hypothalamus increased with age. In the proposed model, social interaction in the open field was decreased in adolescent but not in adult rats, indicating that the pharmacological manipulations caused only transient age-dependent changes. The study was thus in certain aspects successful in creating a novel approach to model social deficit potentially relevant to schizophrenia; other findings require further investigation.
Charles University 3rd Faculty of Medicine Ruska 87 Prague 100 00 Czech Republic
Institute of Physiology CAS Videnska 1083 Prague 142 20 Czech Republic
National Institute of Mental Health Topolova 748 Klecany 250 67 Czech Republic
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