Brunelli Susan A, Hofer Myron A
Developmental Neuroscience, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY 10032,
Behav Brain Res. 2007 Sep 4;182(2):193-207. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2007.04.014. Epub 2007 Apr 27.
Human depression and anxiety disorders show inherited biases across generations, as do antisocial disorders characterized by aggression. Each condition is preceded in children by behavioral inhibition or aggressive behavior, respectively, and both are characterized by separation anxiety disorders. In affected families, adults and children exhibit different forms of altered autonomic nervous system regulation and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity in response to stress. Because it is difficult to determine mechanisms accounting for these associations, animal studies are useful for studying the fundamental relationships between biological and behavioral traits. Pharmacologic and behavioral studies suggest that infant rat ultrasonic vocalizations (USV) are a measure of an early anxiety-like state related to separation anxiety. However, it was not known whether or not early ultrasound emissions in infant rats are markers for genetic risk for anxiety states later in life. To address these questions, we selectively bred two lines of rats based on high and low rates of USV to isolation at postnatal (P) 10 days of age. To our knowledge, ours is the only laboratory that has ever selectively bred on the basis of an infantile trait related to anxiety. The High and Low USV lines show two distinct sets of patterns of behavior, physiology and neurochemistry from infancy through adulthood. As adults High line rats demonstrate "anxious"/"depressed" phenotypes in behavior and autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulation to standard laboratory tests. In Lows, on the other hand, behavior and autonomic regulation are consistent with an "aggressive" phenotype. The High and Low USV lines are the first genetic animal models implicating long-term associations of contrasting "coping styles" with early attachment responses. They thus present a potentially powerful model for examining gene-environment interactions in the development of life-long affective regulation.
人类的抑郁症和焦虑症呈现出跨代遗传倾向,具有攻击性的反社会障碍也是如此。在儿童中,每种情况分别以行为抑制或攻击性行为为先导,且两者都以分离焦虑症为特征。在受影响的家庭中,成人和儿童在应对压力时会表现出不同形式的自主神经系统调节改变和下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺活动。由于难以确定这些关联的机制,动物研究对于研究生物学和行为特征之间的基本关系很有用。药理学和行为学研究表明,幼鼠的超声波发声(USV)是一种与分离焦虑相关的早期焦虑样状态的指标。然而,尚不清楚幼鼠早期的超声波发射是否是其日后患焦虑症遗传风险的标志物。为了解决这些问题,我们根据出生后(P)10 天幼鼠对隔离发出超声波发声的高频率和低频率,选择性培育了两系大鼠。据我们所知,我们的实验室是唯一基于与焦虑相关的幼体特征进行选择性培育的实验室。高 USV 系和低 USV 系从幼年到成年呈现出两组截然不同的行为、生理和神经化学模式。成年后,高 USV 系大鼠在行为和自主神经系统(ANS)调节方面对标准实验室测试表现出“焦虑”/“抑郁”表型。另一方面,低 USV 系大鼠的行为和自主调节与“攻击性”表型一致。高 USV 系和低 USV 系是首批将截然不同的“应对方式”与早期依恋反应的长期关联联系起来的遗传动物模型。因此,它们为研究终身情感调节发展中的基因 - 环境相互作用提供了一个潜在的有力模型。