McAuley J D, Stewart A L, Webber E S, Cromwell H C, Servatius R J, Pang K C H
JP Scott Center for Neuroscience, Mind & Behavior and Psychology Department, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2009 Dec 1;204(1):162-8. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.05.036. Epub 2009 Jun 11.
Inbred Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats have been proposed as a model of anxiety vulnerability as they display behavioral inhibition and a constellation of learning and reactivity abnormalities relative to outbred Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Together, the behaviors of the WKY rat suggest a hypervigilant state that may contribute to its anxiety vulnerability. To test this hypothesis, open-field behavior, acoustic startle, pre-pulse inhibition and timing behavior were assessed in WKY and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Timing behavior was evaluated using a modified version of the peak-interval timing procedure. Training and testing of timing first occurred without audio-visual (AV) interference. Following this initial test, AV interference was included on some trials. Overall, WKY rats took much longer to leave the center of the arena, made fewer line crossings, and reared less, than did SD rats. WKY rats showed much greater startle responses to acoustic stimuli and significantly greater pre-pulse inhibition than did the SD rats. During timing conditions without AV interference, timing accuracy for both strains was similar; peak times for WKY and SD rats were not different. During interference conditions, however, the timing behavior of the two strains was very different. Whereas peak times for SD rats were similar between non-interference and interference conditions, peak times for WKY rats were shorter and response rates higher in interference conditions than in non-interference conditions. The enhanced acoustic startle response, greater prepulse inhibition and altered timing behavior with audio-visual interference supports a characterization of WKY strain as hypervigilant and provides further evidence for the use of the WKY strain as a model of anxiety vulnerability.
近交系Wistar-Kyoto(WKY)大鼠被认为是焦虑易感性的模型,因为与远交系Sprague-Dawley(SD)大鼠相比,它们表现出行为抑制以及一系列学习和反应异常。综合来看,WKY大鼠的行为表明其处于一种过度警觉的状态,这可能导致其焦虑易感性。为了验证这一假设,对WKY和Sprague-Dawley(SD)大鼠的旷场行为、听觉惊吓反应、前脉冲抑制和定时行为进行了评估。定时行为采用峰间隔定时程序的改良版本进行评估。定时的训练和测试首先在没有视听(AV)干扰的情况下进行。在首次测试之后,部分试验中加入了AV干扰。总体而言,与SD大鼠相比,WKY大鼠离开场地中心的时间要长得多,穿越直线的次数更少,直立的次数也更少。WKY大鼠对听觉刺激的惊吓反应比SD大鼠大得多,前脉冲抑制也明显更强。在没有AV干扰的定时条件下,两个品系的定时准确性相似;WKY大鼠和SD大鼠的峰值时间没有差异。然而,在干扰条件下,两个品系的定时行为非常不同。虽然SD大鼠在非干扰和干扰条件下的峰值时间相似,但WKY大鼠在干扰条件下的峰值时间比非干扰条件下更短,反应率更高。增强的听觉惊吓反应、更强的前脉冲抑制以及视听干扰下定时行为的改变,支持了将WKY品系表征为过度警觉的特征,并为将WKY品系用作焦虑易感性模型提供了进一步的证据。