Fuchs Eberhard
Clinical Neurobiology Laboratory, German Primate Center, Göttingen, Germany.
CNS Spectr. 2005 Mar;10(3):182-90. doi: 10.1017/s1092852900010038.
Animal models are invaluable in preclinical research on human psychopathology. Valid animal models to study the pathophysiology of depression and specific biological and behavioral responses to antidepressant drug treatments are of prime interest. In order to improve our knowledge of the causal mechanisms of stress-related disorders such as depression, we need animal models that mirror the situation seen in patients. One promising model is the chronic psychosocial stress paradigm in male tree shrews. Coexistence of two males in visual and olfactory contact leads to a stable dominant/subordinate relationship, with the subordinates showing obvious changes in behavioral, neuroendocrine, and central nervous activity that are similar to the signs and symptoms observed during episodes of depression in patients. To discover whether this model, besides its "face validity" for depression, also has "predictive validity," we treated subordinate animals with the tricyclic antidepressant clomipramine and found a time-dependent recovery of both endocrine function and normal behavior. In contrast, the anxiolytic diazepam was ineffective. Chronic psychosocial stress in male tree shrews significantly decreased hippocampal volume and the proliferation rate of the granule precursor cells in the dentate gyrus. These stress-induced changes can be prevented by treating the animals with clomipramine, tianeptine, or the selective neurokinin receptor antagonist L-760,735. In addition to its apparent face and predictive validity, the tree shrew model also has a "molecular validity" due to the degradation routes of psychotropic compounds and gene sequences of receptors are very similar to those in humans. Although further research is required to validate this model fully, it provides an adequate and interesting non-rodent experimental paradigm for preclinical research on depression.
动物模型在人类精神病理学的临床前研究中具有不可估量的价值。用于研究抑郁症病理生理学以及对抗抑郁药物治疗的特定生物学和行为反应的有效动物模型是人们主要关注的对象。为了增进我们对诸如抑郁症等与压力相关疾病的因果机制的了解,我们需要能够反映患者情况的动物模型。一个有前景的模型是雄性树鼩的慢性社会心理应激范式。两只雄性树鼩在视觉和嗅觉接触下共存会导致稳定的主导/从属关系,从属树鼩会表现出行为、神经内分泌和中枢神经活动的明显变化,这些变化与患者抑郁症发作期间观察到的体征和症状相似。为了探究这个模型除了对抑郁症具有“表面效度”之外是否还具有“预测效度”,我们用三环类抗抑郁药氯米帕明治疗从属动物,发现内分泌功能和正常行为都出现了时间依赖性的恢复。相比之下,抗焦虑药地西泮无效。雄性树鼩的慢性社会心理应激显著降低了海马体体积以及齿状回颗粒前体细胞的增殖率。用氯米帕明、噻奈普汀或选择性神经激肽受体拮抗剂L - 760,735治疗动物可以预防这些应激诱导的变化。除了明显的表面效度和预测效度之外,由于精神药物的降解途径和受体的基因序列与人类非常相似,树鼩模型还具有“分子效度”。尽管需要进一步研究来充分验证这个模型,但它为抑郁症的临床前研究提供了一个合适且有趣的非啮齿类实验范式。