Literature DB >> 19376161

Modeling cholinergic aspects of schizophrenia: focus on the antimuscarinic syndrome.

Segev Barak1.   

Abstract

Symptoms of schizophrenia, commonly divided into positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and cognitive impairments, exhibit different sensitivity to pharmacological treatments. As such, they are typically modeled in animals by behavioral effects of drugs that evoke these symptoms in humans, such as amphetamine or phencyclidine (PCP). Despite the fact that muscarinic antagonists also evoke a schizophrenia-like syndrome ("antimuscarinic syndrome") and findings of cholinergic-related alterations in brains of schizophrenia patients, modeling schizophrenia using muscarinic manipulations has been infrequently considered, and the effects of muscarinic blockade on behavioral tasks relevant to schizophrenia have not been adequately characterized. The present review surveys recent attempts to model schizophrenia-related symptoms using manipulations causing cholinergic dysfunction, particularly muscarinic blockade, in well validated behavioral models of schizophrenia, such as prepulse inhibition and latent inhibition.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19376161     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2009.04.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


  15 in total

1.  Dissociating scopolamine-induced disrupted and persistent latent inhibition: stage-dependent effects of glycine and physostigmine.

Authors:  Segev Barak; Ina Weiner
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2010-02-24       Impact factor: 4.530

2.  Reversal of scopolamine-induced disruption of prepulse inhibition by clozapine in mice.

Authors:  Philipp Singer; Benjamin K Yee
Journal:  Pharmacol Biochem Behav       Date:  2011-12-21       Impact factor: 3.533

3.  Effects of anticholinergic challenge on psychopathology and cognition in drug-free patients with schizophrenia and healthy volunteers.

Authors:  Tanja Veselinović; Ingo Vernaleken; Hildegard Janouschek; Thilo Kellermann; Michael Paulzen; Paul Cumming; Gerhard Gründer
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2014-11-07       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 4.  Cholinergic contributions to the cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia and the viability of cholinergic treatments.

Authors:  Martin Sarter; Cindy Lustig; Stephan F Taylor
Journal:  Neuropharmacology       Date:  2010-12-13       Impact factor: 5.250

Review 5.  Drug models of schizophrenia.

Authors:  Hannah Steeds; Robin L Carhart-Harris; James M Stone
Journal:  Ther Adv Psychopharmacol       Date:  2015-02

6.  Muscarinic receptors regulate auditory and prefrontal cortical communication during auditory processing.

Authors:  Nicholas M James; Howard J Gritton; Nancy Kopell; Kamal Sen; Xue Han
Journal:  Neuropharmacology       Date:  2018-10-21       Impact factor: 5.250

7.  Differential role of muscarinic transmission within the entorhinal cortex and basolateral amygdala in the processing of irrelevant stimuli.

Authors:  Segev Barak; Ina Weiner
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2010-01-13       Impact factor: 7.853

8.  Axonal conduction block as a novel mechanism of prepulse inhibition.

Authors:  Anne H Lee; Evgenia V Megalou; Jean Wang; William N Frost
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-10-31       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Acute N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor hypofunction induced by MK801 evokes sex-specific changes in behaviors observed in open-field testing in adult male and proestrus female rats.

Authors:  I Feinstein; M F Kritzer
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2012-10-22       Impact factor: 3.590

10.  Human electrophysiological correlates of learned irrelevance: effects of the muscarinic M1 antagonist biperiden.

Authors:  Inge Klinkenberg; Arjan Blokland; Wim Riedel; Anke Sambeth
Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2011-11-18       Impact factor: 5.176

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.