Griebel G, Blanchard D C, Jung A, Lee J C, Masuda C K, Blanchard R J
Békésy Laboratory of Neurobiology, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii 96822, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 1995 Dec;34(12):1625-33. doi: 10.1016/0028-3908(95)00121-2.
The Mouse Defense Test Battery (MDTB) has been designed to investigate defensive responses of Swiss-Webster mice confronted with a natural predator, a rat. These behaviors include flight, avoidance, defensive threat/attack responses, and risk assessment activities. Previous studies with the MDTB have suggested that this model may have some utility for the investigation of panicogenic and antipanic compounds. In the present study the MDTB was used to investigate the effects of acute (0.05-1 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min) or chronic (0.5-2 mg/kg, one daily i.p. injection during 10 days) treatment with the benzodiazepine receptor (BZPR) full agonist and panicolytic agent alprazolam. At non motor-impairing doses (0.05-0.5 mg/kg), acute alprazolam failed to alter the avoidance distance between the subject and the predator, the number of avoidances when the rat is approaching, predator assessment activities, defensive threat/attack responses when contact is forced between the subject and the predator or contextual escape attempts after the predator was removed. This was in contrast to chronic treatment which decreased both avoidance variables at 0.5 and 1 mg/kg, defensive threat/attack responses at all doses, and predator assessment responses at 0.5 mg/kg. In addition, the latter treatment reduced post-predator potentiation of escape attempts at 2 mg/kg. These results (1) confirm previous findings with the BZPR full agonist chlordiazepoxide, indicating that these compounds generally attenuate antipredator defensive responses in Swiss-Webster mice; (2) support recent data indicating that panic-altering drugs modulate flight/escape reactions, and suggest that the primary mechanism of action of drugs with efficacy against panic disorder may involve neural systems controlling flight; (3) confirm that the MDTB may be useful for the investigation of panicolytic as well as anxiolytic agents.
小鼠防御测试组合(MDTB)旨在研究瑞士韦伯斯特小鼠面对自然捕食者大鼠时的防御反应。这些行为包括逃跑、回避、防御性威胁/攻击反应以及风险评估活动。先前使用MDTB进行的研究表明,该模型可能对研究致恐慌和抗恐慌化合物具有一定作用。在本研究中,MDTB被用于研究苯二氮䓬受体(BZPR)完全激动剂和抗恐慌药物阿普唑仑的急性(0.05 - 1毫克/千克,腹腔注射,30分钟)或慢性(0.5 - 2毫克/千克,连续10天每天腹腔注射一次)治疗效果。在不影响运动的剂量(0.05 - 0.5毫克/千克)下,急性阿普唑仑未能改变受试小鼠与捕食者之间的回避距离、大鼠靠近时的回避次数、捕食者评估活动、受试小鼠与捕食者被迫接触时的防御性威胁/攻击反应或捕食者被移走后的情境性逃跑尝试。这与慢性治疗形成对比,慢性治疗在0.5和1毫克/千克剂量下降低了两种回避变量,在所有剂量下降低了防御性威胁/攻击反应,在0.5毫克/千克剂量下降低了捕食者评估反应。此外,后一种治疗在2毫克/千克剂量下减少了捕食者移除后逃跑尝试的增强。这些结果(1)证实了先前使用BZPR完全激动剂氯氮䓬的研究结果,表明这些化合物通常会减弱瑞士韦伯斯特小鼠的抗捕食者防御反应;(2)支持了近期的数据,即改变恐慌的药物调节逃跑/逃避反应,并表明对恐慌症有效的药物的主要作用机制可能涉及控制逃跑的神经系统;(3)证实MDTB可能对研究抗恐慌以及抗焦虑药物有用。