Literature DB >> 35772468

Dopamine-transporter heterozygous rats carrying maternal wild-type allele are more vulnerable to the development of compulsive behavior.

Fabiana Festucci1,2, Eugenia Annunzi3, Martina Pepe1, Giuseppe Curcio2, Claudio D'Addario4, Walter Adriani1.   

Abstract

Compulsivity is defined as an unstoppable tendency toward repetitive and habitual actions, which are reiterated despite negative consequences. Polydipsia is induced preclinically by intermittent reward, leading rodents to ingest large amounts of fluids. We focused on the role of dopamine transporter (DAT) and inheritance factors in compulsive behavior. Our sample consisted of DAT heterozygous (HET) rats with different genetic inheritance (MAT-HET, born from WT-dams × KO-fathers; MIX-HET, born from HET-dams × KO-fathers). As controls, we used both wild-type (WT) rats and their socially-isolated (WTi) siblings. We ran the schedule-induced polydipsia (SIP) protocol, to induce compulsive behavior; then the Y-maze and marble-burying tests, to verify its actual development. Only MAT-HET (who inherited the functional DAT allele from the WT mother) is vulnerable to developing compulsive behavior. MAT-HET rats drank increasingly more water during SIP; they showed significant perseverance in the Y-maze test and exhibited compulsive actions in the marble-burying test. Interestingly, compulsive behaviors of MAT-HET rats correlated with expression ex vivo of different genes in different areas. Regarding the prefrontal cortex (PFC), D2R correlated with Y-maze "perseverance" in addition to BDNF; considering the amygdala (AMY), both D3R and OXTR correlated with SIP "licks." Indeed, compulsivity may be linked to D2R and BDNF in PFC, while extreme anxiety in MAT-HET rats may be associated with D3R and OXTR in the AMY. These results confirm some similarities between MAT-HET and DAT-KO subjects, and link the epigenetic context of the DAT gene to the development of compulsive behavior.
© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

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Keywords:  Y-maze; dopamine transporter; heterozygous rats; marble-burying; obsessive-compulsive disorder; perseverative behavior; schedule-induced polydipsia

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35772468     DOI: 10.1002/syn.22244

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Synapse        ISSN: 0887-4476            Impact factor:   2.537


  1 in total

1.  Potential effects of noni (Morinda citrifolia L.) fruits extract against obsessive-compulsive disorder in marble burying and nestlet shredding behavior mice models.

Authors:  Srikanth Jeyabalan; Logeshwari Bala; Kavimani Subramanian; Sugin Lal Jabaris; Mahendran Sekar; Ling Shing Wong; Vetriselvan Subramaniyan; Kumarappan Chidambaram; Siew Hua Gan; Nur Najihah Izzati Mat Rani; M Yasmin Begum; Sher Zaman Safi; Siddharthan Selvaraj; Adel Al Fatease; Ali Alamri; Kamini Vijeepallam; Shivkanya Fuloria; Neeraj Kumar Fuloria; Sinouvassane Djearamane
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2022-09-16       Impact factor: 5.988

  1 in total

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