Lee Sydney E, Park Sung-Hoon, Aldrich John C, Fonken Laura K, Gaudet Andrew D
Department of Psychology, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
Department of Neurology, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
J Neurosci Res. 2024 Dec;102(12):e70002. doi: 10.1002/jnr.70002.
Anxiety and chronic pain afflict hundreds of millions worldwide. Anxiety and pain are more prevalent in females compared to males. Unfortunately, robust sex differences in human anxiety are not recapitulated in rodent tests, and results from rodent pain studies frequently fail to translate clinically. Therefore, there is a need to develop tests that reflect the differential salience of anxiety or pain-related stimuli between the sexes. Accordingly, here we introduce the Thermal Increments Dark-Light (TIDAL) conflict test. The TIDAL test places an anxiety-relevant stimulus (dark vs. illuminated chamber) in conflict with a heat-related stimulus (incrementally heated vs. isothermic chamber); mice freely explore both apparatus chambers. Here, we aim to determine whether the TIDAL conflict test reveals in mice underappreciated sex differences in anxiety and/or heat sensitivity. We establish in four distinct experiments that females on the TIDAL conflict test persist substantially longer on the dark-heated plate, suggesting that female mice exhibit elevated anxiety-like behavior. Mice more strongly prefer the heated-dark plate on the TIDAL conflict test compared to control thermal place preference with both chambers illuminated. We also reveal that an anxiety-relieving drug, paroxetine, reduces mouse preference for the heating dark plate, supporting the validity of the TIDAL test. Therefore, our new TIDAL conflict test reliably unmasks the relative salience of anxiety (vs. heat sensitivity): mice that are female exhibit robust anxiety-like behaviors not consistently observed in classical tests. Future studies should incorporate TIDAL and other conflict tests to better understand rodent behavior and to identify mechanisms underlying anxiety and pain.
焦虑和慢性疼痛困扰着全球数亿人。与男性相比,焦虑和疼痛在女性中更为普遍。不幸的是,啮齿动物测试并未重现人类焦虑中明显的性别差异,而且啮齿动物疼痛研究的结果在临床上往往无法得到应用。因此,需要开发能够反映性别之间焦虑或疼痛相关刺激不同显著性的测试。相应地,我们在此引入热增量明暗(TIDAL)冲突测试。TIDAL测试将与焦虑相关的刺激(暗室与亮室)与热相关的刺激(逐渐加热的室与等温室)相冲突;小鼠可自由探索两个实验装置室。在此,我们旨在确定TIDAL冲突测试是否能揭示小鼠在焦虑和/或热敏感性方面未被充分认识的性别差异。我们通过四个不同的实验确定,在TIDAL冲突测试中,雌性小鼠在暗热板上停留的时间显著更长,这表明雌性小鼠表现出更高的焦虑样行为。与两个室都亮着的对照热偏好测试相比,小鼠在TIDAL冲突测试中更强烈地偏好加热暗板。我们还发现,一种缓解焦虑的药物帕罗西汀会降低小鼠对加热暗板的偏好,这支持了TIDAL测试的有效性。因此,我们新的TIDAL冲突测试可靠地揭示了焦虑(与热敏感性相比)的相对显著性:雌性小鼠表现出在经典测试中未一致观察到的强烈焦虑样行为。未来的研究应纳入TIDAL和其他冲突测试,以更好地理解啮齿动物行为,并确定焦虑和疼痛的潜在机制。