de Boer Sietse F, Koolhaas Jaap M
Department of Behavioral Physiology, Biological Center, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 14, 9750 AA Haren, The Netherlands.
Eur J Pharmacol. 2005 Dec 5;526(1-3):125-39. doi: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2005.09.065. Epub 2005 Nov 28.
More than any other brain neurotransmitter system, the indolamine serotonin (5-HT) has been linked to aggression in a wide and diverse range of species, including humans. The nature of this linkage, however, is not simple and it has proven difficult to unravel the precise role of this amine in the predisposition for and execution of aggressive behavior. The dogmatic view that 5-HT inhibits aggression has dominated both pharmacological research strategies to develop specific and effective novel drug treatments that reduce aggressive behavior and the pharmacological mechanistic interpretation of putative serenic drug effects. Our studies on brain serotonin and aggression in feral wild-type rats using the resident-intruder paradigm have challenged this so-called serotonin deficiency hypothesis of aggressive behavior. The well-known fact that certain 5-HT(1A/1B) receptor agonists potently and specifically reduce aggressive behavior without motor slowing and sedative effects is only consistent with this hypothesis under the assumption that the agonist mainly acts on the postsynaptic 5-HT(1A/1B) receptor sites. However, systemic injections of anti-aggressive doses of 5-HT(1A) and (1B) agonists robustly decrease brain 5-HT release due to their inhibitory actions at somatodendritic and terminal autoreceptors, respectively. The availability of the novel benzodioxopiperazine compound S-15535, which acts in vivo as a preferential agonist of the somatodendritic 5-HT(1A) auto-receptor and as an antagonist (weak partial agonist) at postsynaptic 5-HT(1A) receptors, allows for a pharmacological analysis of the exact site of action of this anti-aggressive effect. It was found that, similar to other prototypical full and partial 5-HT(1A) and/or 5-HT(1B) receptor agonists like repinotan, 8-OHDPAT, ipsapirone, buspirone, alnespirone, eltoprazine, CGS-12066B and CP-93129, also S-15535 very effectively reduced offensive aggressive behavior. Unlike the other ligands, however, a remarkable degree of behavioral specificity was observed after treatment with S-15535, in that the anti-aggressive effects were not accompanied by inhibiting (like other 5-HT(1A) receptor agonist with moderate to high efficacy at postsynaptic 5-HT(1A) receptors) or enhancing (like agonists with activity at 5-HT(1B) receptors and alnespirone) non-aggressive motor behaviors (e.g., social exploration, ambulation, rearing, and grooming) beyond the range of undrugged animals with corresponding levels of aggression. The involvement of 5-HT(1A) and/or 5-HT(1B) receptors in the anti-aggressive actions of these drugs was convincingly confirmed by showing that the selective 5-HT(1A) receptor antagonist WAY-100635 and/or the 5-HT(1B) receptor antagonist GR-127935, while inactive when given alone, effectively attenuated/prevented these actions. Furthermore, combined administration of S-15535 with either alnespirone or CGS-42066B elicited a clear additive effect, indicated by a left-ward shift in their dose-effect curves, providing further support for presynaptic sites of action (i.e., inhibitory somatodendritic 5-HT(1A) and terminal 5-HT(1B) autoreceptors). These findings strongly suggest that the specific anti-aggressive effects of 5-HT(1A) and 5-HT(1B) receptor agonists are predominantly based on reduction rather than enhancement of 5-HT neurotransmission during the combative social interaction. Apparently, normal display of offensive aggressive behavior is positively related to brief spikes in serotonergic activity, whereas an inverse relationship probably exists between tonic 5-HT activity and abnormal forms of aggression only.
与其他任何脑内神经递质系统相比,吲哚胺5-羟色胺(5-HT)在包括人类在内的广泛多样的物种中都与攻击行为有关。然而,这种联系的本质并不简单,而且已证明很难阐明这种胺在攻击行为的易感性和实施过程中的确切作用。5-HT抑制攻击行为的教条观点主导了开发减少攻击行为的特异性和有效新型药物治疗的药理学研究策略,以及对假定的宁静药物作用的药理学机制解释。我们使用定居者-入侵者范式对野生型大鼠脑内5-羟色胺和攻击行为进行的研究对这种所谓的攻击行为5-羟色胺缺乏假说提出了挑战。某些5-HT(1A/1B)受体激动剂能有效且特异性地减少攻击行为而无运动迟缓及镇静作用,这一众所周知的事实仅在激动剂主要作用于突触后5-HT(1A/1B)受体位点的假设下才与该假说一致。然而,全身注射具有抗攻击剂量的5-HT(1A)和(1B)激动剂会因它们分别对树突-胞体和终末自身受体的抑制作用而显著降低脑内5-HT释放。新型苯并二氧哌嗪化合物S-15535在体内作为树突-胞体5-HT(1A)自身受体的优先激动剂以及突触后5-HT(1A)受体的拮抗剂(弱部分激动剂),这使得对这种抗攻击作用的确切作用位点进行药理学分析成为可能。研究发现,与其他典型的完全和部分5-HT(1A)和/或5-HT(1B)受体激动剂如瑞哌酮、8-羟基二苯丙氨酸、伊沙匹隆、丁螺环酮、阿奈螺酮、依他普嗪、CGS-12066B和CP-93129一样,S-15535也能非常有效地减少攻击性攻击行为。然而,与其他配体不同的是,用S-15535治疗后观察到了显著的行为特异性,即抗攻击作用并未伴随着抑制(如其他在突触后5-HT(1A)受体具有中到高效力的5-HT(1A)受体激动剂)或增强(如在5-HT(1B)受体有活性的激动剂和阿奈螺酮)非攻击性运动行为(如社交探索、行走、竖毛和梳理),超出了具有相应攻击水平的未用药动物的范围。通过表明选择性5-HT(1A)受体拮抗剂WAY-100635和/或5-HT(1B)受体拮抗剂GR-127935虽然单独给药时无活性,但能有效减弱/预防这些作用,令人信服地证实了5-HT(1A)和/或5-HT(1B)受体参与了这些药物的抗攻击作用。此外,S-15535与阿奈螺酮或CGS-42066B联合给药产生了明显的相加效应,表现为它们的剂量-效应曲线向左移动,这为作用于突触前位点(即抑制性树突-胞体5-HT(1A)和终末5-HT(1B)自身受体)提供了进一步支持。这些发现强烈表明,5-HT(1A)和5-HT(1B)受体激动剂的特异性抗攻击作用主要基于在战斗性社会互动过程中5-羟色胺神经传递的减少而非增强。显然,攻击性攻击行为的正常表现与5-羟色胺能活性的短暂峰值呈正相关,而只有紧张性5-羟色胺活性与异常形式的攻击行为之间可能存在负相关。