Lopez-Aumatell Regina, Guitart-Masip Marc, Vicens-Costa Elia, Gimenez-Llort Lydia, Valdar William, Johannesson Martina, Flint Jonathan, Tobeña Adolf, Fernandez-Teruel Alberto
Medical Psychology Unit, Department of Psychiatry & Forensic Medicine, Institute of Neurosciences, School of Medicine, Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain.
Behav Brain Res. 2008 Mar 17;188(1):41-55. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2007.10.015. Epub 2007 Oct 26.
Anxiety-related behaviors were evaluated across various tests in a large sample (n=787, both sexes) of genetically heterogeneous (N/Nih-HS) rats, derived from an eight-way cross of inbred strains. These tests either evoke unlearned (black-white box, BWB-; novel-cage activity, NACT-; elevated "zero" maze, ZM-; baseline acoustic startle response, BAS-) or learned (fear-potentiated startle, FPS-; two-way active-shuttle box-avoidance acquisition, SHAV-) anxious/fearful responses. The results showed that, with the exception of fear-potentiated startle, almost all (unlearned and learned) behaviors assessed fit with a pattern of sex effects characterized by male rats as being more fearful than females. We applied factor analyses (oblique rotation) to each sex, with the final two-factor solution showing: (1) a first factor (labelled as "Timidity") comprising BWB, NACT and ZM variables in both sexes, plus SHAV responding in the case of males, and (2) a second factor (called "Defensive Flight") which grouped BAS, FPS, and SHAV responding in both sexes. An additional regression analysis showed significant influences of (unlearned) risk assessment (i.e. stretch-attendance) behavior on SHAV in males, while FPS was the main variable positively influencing SHAV (in the intermediate and advanced phases of acquisition) in females. This indicates, for the first time, that fear-potentiated startle may have a facilitating role in the rat's active responses (at least in females) to the cue in the intermediate to advanced phases (i.e. when the initial "passive avoidance/active avoidance" begins to fade) of shuttle box avoidance acquisition. The results of this first extensive behavioral evaluation of N/Nih-HS rats are discussed in terms of their potential usefulness for present and future neurobehavioral and genetic studies of fearfulness/anxiety.
在一个来自近交系八向杂交的基因异质性(N/Nih-HS)大鼠大样本(n = 787,雌雄均有)中,通过各种测试评估了与焦虑相关的行为。这些测试要么引发非习得性(黑白箱测试,BWB-;新笼活动测试,NACT-;高架“零”迷宫测试,ZM-;基线听觉惊吓反应,BAS-),要么引发习得性(恐惧增强惊吓反应,FPS-;双向主动穿梭箱回避获取测试,SHAV-)焦虑/恐惧反应。结果表明,除恐惧增强惊吓反应外,几乎所有评估的(非习得性和习得性)行为都符合一种性别效应模式,其特征是雄性大鼠比雌性大鼠更恐惧。我们对每个性别进行了因子分析(斜交旋转),最终的两因子解决方案显示:(1)第一个因子(标记为“胆小”)在两性中均包含BWB、NACT和ZM变量,在雄性中还包括SHAV反应,以及(2)第二个因子(称为“防御性逃跑”)将两性中的BAS、FPS和SHAV反应归为一组。额外的回归分析表明,(非习得性)风险评估(即伸展注意)行为对雄性大鼠的SHAV有显著影响,而FPS是在雌性大鼠中(在获取的中期和后期阶段)对SHAV有正向影响的主要变量。这首次表明,恐惧增强惊吓反应可能在大鼠对穿梭箱回避获取中期到后期阶段(即当初始的“被动回避/主动回避”开始消退时)的线索的主动反应中(至少在雌性中)起到促进作用。本文根据N/Nih-HS大鼠首次广泛行为评估的结果,讨论了其在当前和未来恐惧/焦虑神经行为和遗传研究中的潜在用途。