Oliveras Ignasi, Río-Álamos Cristóbal, Cañete Toni, Blázquez Gloria, Martínez-Membrives Esther, Giorgi Osvaldo, Corda Maria G, Tobeña Adolf, Fernández-Teruel Alberto
Medical Psychology Unit, Department of Psychiatry and Forensic Medicine, School of Medicine, Institute of Neurosciences, Autonomous University of Barcelona Barcelona, Spain.
Section of Pharmaceutical, Pharmacological and Nutraceutical Sciences, Department of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Cagliari Cagliari, Italy.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2015 Aug 18;9:213. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00213. eCollection 2015.
Animal models of schizophrenia-relevant symptoms are increasingly important for progress in our understanding of the neurobiological basis of the disorder and for discovering novel and more specific treatments. Prepulse inhibition (PPI) and working memory, which are impaired in schizophrenic patients, are among the symptoms/processes modeled in those animal analogs. We have evaluated whether a genetically-selected rat model, the Roman high-avoidance inbred strain (RHA-I), displays PPI deficits as compared with its Roman low-avoidance (RLA-I) counterpart and the genetically heterogeneous NIH-HS rat stock. We have investigated whether PPI deficits predict spatial working memory impairments (in the Morris water maze; MWM) in these three rat types (Experiment 1), as well as in a separate sample of NIH-HS rats stratified according to their extreme (High, Medium, Low) PPI scores (Experiment 2). The results from Experiment 1 show that RHA-I rats display PPI and spatial working memory deficits compared to both RLA-I and NIH-HS rats. Likewise, in Experiment 2, "Low-PPI" NIH-HS rats present significantly impaired working memory with respect to "Medium-PPI" and "High-PPI" NIH-HS subgroups. Further support to these results comes from correlational, factorial, and multiple regression analyses, which reveal that PPI is positively associated with spatial working memory performance. Conversely, cued learning in the MWM was not associated with PPI. Thus, using genetically-selected and genetically heterogeneous rats, the present study shows, for the first time, that PPI is a positive predictor of performance in a spatial working memory task. These results may have translational value for schizophrenia symptom research in humans, as they suggest that either by psychogenetic selection or by focusing on extreme PPI scores from a genetically heterogeneous rat stock, it is possible to detect a useful (perhaps "at risk") phenotype to study cognitive anomalies linked to schizophrenia.
与精神分裂症相关症状的动物模型对于我们理解该疾病的神经生物学基础以及发现新的、更具特异性的治疗方法而言愈发重要。精神分裂症患者受损的前脉冲抑制(PPI)和工作记忆是这些动物类似模型所模拟的症状/过程之一。我们评估了一种经基因选择的大鼠模型——罗马高回避近交系(RHA-I),与它的罗马低回避(RLA-I)对应品系以及基因异质性的NIH-HS大鼠种群相比,是否表现出PPI缺陷。我们研究了在这三种大鼠类型中(实验1),以及在根据其极端(高、中、低)PPI分数分层的另一组NIH-HS大鼠样本中(实验2),PPI缺陷是否预示着空间工作记忆障碍(在莫里斯水迷宫实验中;MWM)。实验1的结果表明,与RLA-I和NIH-HS大鼠相比,RHA-I大鼠表现出PPI和空间工作记忆缺陷。同样,在实验2中,“低PPI”的NIH-HS大鼠相对于“中PPI”和“高PPI”的NIH-HS亚组,其工作记忆明显受损。相关性、因子分析和多元回归分析为这些结果提供了进一步支持,这些分析表明PPI与空间工作记忆表现呈正相关。相反,MWM中的线索学习与PPI无关。因此,本研究首次使用经基因选择和基因异质性的大鼠表明,PPI是空间工作记忆任务表现的正向预测指标。这些结果可能对人类精神分裂症症状研究具有转化价值,因为它们表明,通过心理遗传学选择或关注基因异质性大鼠种群中的极端PPI分数,有可能检测到一种有用的(或许是“有风险的”)表型,以研究与精神分裂症相关的认知异常。