Criado J R, Ehlers C L
Molecular and Integrative Neurosciences Department, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, SP30-1501, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
Neuroscience. 2009 Oct 6;163(2):506-23. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.06.039. Epub 2009 Jun 21.
Mouse models have been developed to simulate several relevant human traits associated with alcohol use and dependence. However, the neurophysiological substrates regulating these traits remain to be completely elucidated. We have previously demonstrated that differences in the event-related potential (ERP) responses can be found that distinguish high-alcohol preferring from low alcohol preferring mice that resemble differences seen in human studies of individuals with high and low risk for alcohol dependence. Recently, evidence of genes that affect event-related oscillations (EROs) and the risk for alcohol dependence has emerged, however, to date EROs have not been evaluated in genetic mouse models of high and low alcohol preference. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to characterize EROs in mouse models of high (C57BL/6 [B6] and high alcohol preference 1 [HAP-1] mice) and low (DBA/2J [D2] and low alcohol preference-1 [LAP-1] mice) alcohol preference. A time-frequency representation method was used to determine delta, theta and alpha/beta ERO energy and the degree of phase variation in these mouse models. The present results suggest that the decrease in P3 amplitudes previously shown in B6 mice, compared to D2 mice, is related to reductions in evoked delta ERO energy and delta and theta phase locking. In contrast, the increase in P1 amplitudes reported in HAP-1 mice, compared to LAP-1 mice, is associated with increases in evoked theta ERO energy. These studies suggest that differences in delta and theta ERO measures in mice mirror changes observed between groups at high- and low-risk for alcoholism where changes in EROs were found to be more significant than group differences in P3 amplitudes, further suggesting that ERO measures are more stable endophenotypes in the study of alcohol dependence. Further studies are needed to determine the relationship between expression of these neurophysiological endophenotypes and the genetic profile of these mouse models.
已开发出小鼠模型来模拟与酒精使用和依赖相关的几种人类相关特征。然而,调节这些特征的神经生理底物仍有待完全阐明。我们之前已经证明,在事件相关电位(ERP)反应中可以发现差异,这些差异能够区分高酒精偏好小鼠和低酒精偏好小鼠,这类似于在人类酒精依赖高风险和低风险个体研究中所观察到的差异。最近,已经出现了影响事件相关振荡(ERO)和酒精依赖风险的基因证据,然而,迄今为止,ERO尚未在高酒精偏好和低酒精偏好的基因小鼠模型中进行评估。因此,本研究的目的是在高酒精偏好(C57BL/6 [B6]和高酒精偏好1 [HAP-1]小鼠)和低酒精偏好(DBA/2J [D2]和低酒精偏好-1 [LAP-1]小鼠)的小鼠模型中表征ERO。使用时频表示方法来确定这些小鼠模型中的δ、θ和α/β ERO能量以及相位变化程度。目前的结果表明,与D2小鼠相比,之前在B6小鼠中显示的P3振幅降低与诱发的δ ERO能量以及δ和θ相位锁定的降低有关。相反,与LAP-1小鼠相比,HAP-1小鼠中报道的P1振幅增加与诱发的θ ERO能量增加有关。这些研究表明,小鼠中δ和θ ERO测量的差异反映了酒精中毒高风险和低风险组之间观察到的变化,其中ERO的变化比P3振幅的组间差异更显著,这进一步表明ERO测量在酒精依赖研究中是更稳定的内表型。需要进一步研究来确定这些神经生理内表型的表达与这些小鼠模型的基因谱之间的关系。