Department of Biological Sciences, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, 34141, Korea.
Center for Synaptic Brain Dysfunctions, Institute for Basic Science, Daejeon, 34141, Korea.
Mol Autism. 2022 Oct 3;13(1):40. doi: 10.1186/s13229-022-00518-1.
A core symptom of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is repetitive and restrictive patterns of behavior. Cognitive inflexibility has been proposed as a potential basis for these symptoms of ASD. More generally, behavioral inflexibility has been proposed to underlie repetitive and restrictive behavior in ASD. Here, we investigated whether and how behavioral flexibility is compromised in a widely used animal model of ASD.
We compared the behavioral performance of Shank2-knockout mice and wild-type littermates in reversal learning employing a probabilistic classical trace conditioning paradigm. A conditioned stimulus (odor) was paired with an unconditioned appetitive (water, 6 µl) or aversive (air puff) stimulus in a probabilistic manner. We also compared air puff-induced eye closure responses of Shank2-knockout and wild-type mice.
Male, but not female, Shank2-knockout mice showed impaired reversal learning when the expected outcomes consisted of a water reward and a strong air puff. Moreover, male, but not female, Shank2-knockout mice showed stronger anticipatory eye closure responses to the air puff compared to wild-type littermates, raising the possibility that the impairment might reflect enhanced fear. In support of this contention, male Shank2-knockout mice showed intact reversal learning when the strong air puff was replaced with a mild air puff and when the expected outcomes consisted of only rewards.
We examined behavioral flexibility in one behavioral task (reversal learning in a probabilistic classical trace conditioning paradigm) using one ASD mouse model (Shank2-knockout mice). Thus, future work is needed to clarify the extent to which our findings (that enhanced fear limits behavioral flexibility in ASD) can explain the behavioral inflexibility associated with ASD. Also, we examined only the relationship between fear and behavioral flexibility, leaving open the question of whether abnormalities in processes other than fear contribute to behavioral inflexibility in ASD. Finally, the neurobiological mechanisms linking Shank2-knockout and enhanced fear remain to be elucidated.
Our results indicate that enhanced fear suppresses reversal learning in the presence of an intact capability to learn cue-outcome contingency changes in Shank2-knockout mice. Our findings suggest that behavioral flexibility might be seriously limited by abnormal emotional responses in ASD.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的核心症状是重复和受限的行为模式。认知灵活性已被提出作为 ASD 这些症状的潜在基础。更一般地说,行为灵活性被认为是 ASD 中重复和受限行为的基础。在这里,我们研究了在 ASD 的一种广泛使用的动物模型中,行为灵活性是否以及如何受到损害。
我们比较了 Shank2 敲除小鼠和野生型同窝仔鼠在采用概率经典痕迹条件反射范式的反转学习中的行为表现。条件刺激(气味)以概率方式与非条件奖赏(水,6 μl)或惩罚(空气喷流)刺激配对。我们还比较了 Shank2 敲除和野生型小鼠的空气喷流诱导的闭眼反应。
雄性 Shank2 敲除小鼠在预期结果为水奖赏和强烈空气喷流时表现出反转学习受损。此外,雄性 Shank2 敲除小鼠与野生型同窝仔鼠相比,对空气喷流表现出更强的预期闭眼反应,这表明损伤可能反映出增强的恐惧。支持这一论点的是,当强烈的空气喷流被轻度空气喷流取代,并且预期结果仅由奖赏组成时,雄性 Shank2 敲除小鼠表现出完整的反转学习。
我们在一项行为任务(概率经典痕迹条件反射范式中的反转学习)中使用一种 ASD 小鼠模型(Shank2 敲除小鼠)检查了行为灵活性。因此,需要进一步的工作来阐明我们的发现(即增强的恐惧限制了 ASD 中的行为灵活性)在多大程度上可以解释与 ASD 相关的行为不灵活性。此外,我们仅检查了恐惧与行为灵活性之间的关系,而未解决恐惧以外的过程异常是否有助于 ASD 中的行为不灵活性的问题。最后,Shank2 敲除与增强恐惧之间的神经生物学机制仍有待阐明。
我们的结果表明,在 Shank2 敲除小鼠中,增强的恐惧抑制了在存在完整学习线索-结果关联变化能力的情况下的反转学习。我们的发现表明,在 ASD 中,行为灵活性可能受到异常情绪反应的严重限制。