Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Experimental Psychology, Heinrich-Heine-University of Düsseldorf, Universitätsstr.1, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany.
Neuroscience. 2012 May 17;210:249-57. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2012.02.024. Epub 2012 Feb 22.
The withholding of expected rewards results in extinction of behavior and, hypothetically, to depression-like symptoms. In a test of this hypothesis, we examined the effects of extinction of food-reinforced lever-pressing on collateral behaviors that might be indices of depression. Operant extinction is known to be aversive to the organism and results in avoidance behavior. We hypothesized that avoidance of, or withdrawal from, the former source of reward may serve as a marker for "despair." Adult male Wistar rats (n=6-7 animals per group) were exposed to a Skinner box attached to a second compartment of the same size, providing opportunity for the animals to leave the operant chamber and to enter the "withdrawal" compartment. The animals spent a portion of the time during the extinction trials in this second chamber. To assess the predictive validity of this behavior as a potential marker of "despair," we tested the effects of chronic administration of two common antidepressant drugs on this measure. The tricyclic antidepressant imipramine (20 mg/kg) as well as the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram (20 mg/kg) reduced the number of entries and time spent in the withdrawal compartment. We propose that entries into and time spent in the withdrawal compartment may operationalize "avoidance," a core symptom of major depression. Rearing as well as biting behaviors during the extinction trials were also attenuated by the antidepressant treatment. These results lend support to the hypothesis that extinction of positively reinforced operants evokes behaviors that reflect elements of "despair/depression" because these behaviors are modulated by antidepressant treatment. The avoidance of the operant chamber as a consequence of extinction, together with rearing and biting behaviors, may serve as useful measures for the testing of antidepressant treatments.
预期奖励的剥夺会导致行为的消退,从理论上讲,还会导致类似抑郁的症状。在对这一假设的检验中,我们研究了食物强化杆按压操作消退对可能作为抑郁指标的附带行为的影响。众所周知,操作性消退对机体具有厌恶性,并导致回避行为。我们假设,对以前奖励来源的回避或退缩可能作为“绝望”的标志物。成年雄性 Wistar 大鼠(每组 6-7 只动物)暴露于与同一大小的第二个隔室相连的斯金纳箱中,为动物提供离开操作室并进入“撤退”隔室的机会。在这些实验中,动物在第二隔室中度过了一部分时间。为了评估这种行为作为“绝望”潜在标志物的预测有效性,我们测试了两种常见抗抑郁药物对这种测量的影响。三环抗抑郁药丙咪嗪(20mg/kg)和选择性 5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂西酞普兰(20mg/kg)减少了进入和停留在撤退隔室的次数和时间。我们提出,进入和停留在撤退隔室的次数和时间可能使“回避”操作化,回避是重度抑郁症的核心症状。在消退试验期间,动物的扒土和啃咬行为也被抗抑郁药物治疗所减弱。这些结果支持了这样的假设,即正强化操作的消退会引发反映“绝望/抑郁”元素的行为,因为这些行为可以被抗抑郁药物治疗所调节。作为消退的结果,对操作室的回避,以及扒土和啃咬行为,可能作为抗抑郁药物治疗测试的有用指标。