Bannai Makoto, Fish Eric W, Faccidomo Sara, Miczek Klaus A
Department of Psychology, Tufts University, Medford and Boston, MA, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2007 Aug;193(2):295-304. doi: 10.1007/s00213-007-0780-5. Epub 2007 Apr 18.
In rodents, serotonin 1B (5-HT(1B)) agonists specifically reduce aggressive behaviors, including several forms of escalated aggression. One form of escalated aggression is seen in mice that seek the opportunity to attack another mouse by accelerating their responding during a fixed interval (FI) schedule. Responses preceding the opportunity to attack may reflect aggressive motivation.
This study investigated the effects of two 5-HT(1B) receptor agonists on the motivation to fight and the performance of heightened aggression.
Male mice were housed as "residents" and performed nose-poke responses on an FI 10-min schedule with the opportunity to briefly attack an "intruder" serving as the reinforcer. In the first experiment, the 5-HT(1B) receptor agonist, CP-94,253 (0-10 mg/kg, IP), was given 30 min before the FI 10 schedule. To confirm that CP-94,253 achieved its effects via 5-HT(1B) receptors, the 5HT(1B/1D) receptor antagonist, GR 127,935 (10 mg/kg, IP) was administrated before the agonist injection. In the second experiment, the 5-HT(1B) agonist CP-93,129 (0-1.0 microg) was microinjected into the dorsal raphe 10 min before the FI 10 schedule.
The agonists had similar effects on all behaviors. CP-94,253 and CP-93,129 significantly reduced the escalated aggression towards the intruder at doses lower than those required to affect operant responding. The highest doses of CP-94,253 (10 mg/kg) and CP-93,129 (1.0 microg) decreased the rate and accelerating pattern of responding during the FI 10 schedule; lower doses were less effective. GR 127,935 antagonized CP-94,253's effects on all other behaviors, except response rate.
These data extend the anti-aggressive effects of 5-HT(1B) agonists to a type of escalated aggression that is rewarding and further suggest that these effects are associated with actions at 5-HT(1B) receptors in the dorsal raphe.
在啮齿动物中,5-羟色胺1B(5-HT(1B))激动剂可特异性减少攻击行为,包括几种升级形式的攻击行为。一种升级攻击行为见于小鼠,它们在固定间隔(FI)时间表中通过加快反应速度来寻找攻击另一只小鼠的机会。攻击机会之前的反应可能反映了攻击动机。
本研究调查了两种5-HT(1B)受体激动剂对战斗动机和升级攻击行为表现的影响。
雄性小鼠作为“居住者”饲养,并在FI 10分钟时间表上进行鼻戳反应,有机会短暂攻击作为强化物的“入侵者”。在第一个实验中,在FI 10时间表前30分钟给予5-HT(1B)受体激动剂CP-94,253(0 - 10毫克/千克,腹腔注射)。为证实CP-94,253通过5-HT(1B)受体发挥作用,在激动剂注射前给予5-HT(1B/1D)受体拮抗剂GR 127,935(10毫克/千克,腹腔注射)。在第二个实验中,在FI 10时间表前10分钟将5-HT(1B)激动剂CP-93,129(0 - 1.0微克)微量注射到中缝背核。
激动剂对所有行为有相似影响。CP-94,253和CP-93,129在低于影响操作性反应所需剂量时,显著减少了对入侵者的升级攻击行为。CP-94,253(10毫克/千克)和CP-93,129(1.0微克)的最高剂量降低了FI 10时间表期间的反应速率和加速模式;较低剂量效果较差。GR 127,935拮抗了CP-94,253对除反应速率外所有其他行为的影响。
这些数据将5-HT(1B)激动剂的抗攻击作用扩展到一种有奖励作用的升级攻击行为类型,并进一步表明这些作用与中缝背核中5-HT(1B)受体的作用有关。