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1.
Brain Behav Immun ; 83: 283-287, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31521731

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In previous work, we applied novel in vivo imaging methods to reveal that white matter pathology in patients with first-episode psychosis (FEP) is mainly characterized by excessive extracellular free-water, and to a lesser extent by cellular processes, such as demyelination. Here, we apply a back-translational approach to evaluate whether or not a rodent model of maternal immune activation (MIA) induces patterns of white matter pathology that we observed in patients with FEP. To this end, we examined free-water and tissue-specific white matter alterations in rats born to mothers exposed to the viral mimic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid (Poly-I:C) in pregnancy, which is widely used to produce alterations relevant to schizophrenia and is characterized by a robust neuroinflammatory response. METHOD: Pregnant dams were injected on gestational day 15 with the viral mimic Poly-I:C (4 mg/kg) or saline. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images were acquired from 17 male offspring (9 Poly-I:C and 8 saline) on postnatal day 90, after the emergence of brain structural and behavioral abnormalities. The free-water fraction (FW) and tissue-specific fractional anisotropy (FAT), as well as conventional fractional anisotropy (FA) were computed across voxels traversing a white matter skeleton. Voxel-wise and whole-brain averaged white matter were tested for significant microstructural alterations in immune-challenged, relative to saline-exposed offspring. RESULTS: Compared to saline-exposed offspring, those exposed to maternal Poly-I:C displayed increased extracellular FW averaged across voxels comprising a white matter skeleton (t(15) = 2.74; p = 0.01). Voxel-wise analysis ascribed these changes to white matter within the corpus callosum, external capsule and the striatum. In contrast, no significant between-group differences emerged for FAT or for conventional FA, measured across average and voxel-wise white matter. CONCLUSION: We identified excess FW across frontal white matter fibers of rats exposed to prenatal immune activation, analogous to our "bedside" observation in FEP patients. Findings from this initial experiment promote use of the MIA model to examine pathological pathways underlying FW alterations observed in patients with schizophrenia. Establishing these mechanisms has important implications for clinical studies, as free-water imaging reflects a feasible biomarker that has so far yielded consistent findings in the early stages of schizophrenia.


Subject(s)
Extracellular Space/chemistry , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/immunology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/pathology , Psychotic Disorders/pathology , Schizophrenia/pathology , Uterus/immunology , Water/analysis , White Matter/pathology , Animals , Anisotropy , Biomarkers/analysis , Extracellular Space/diagnostic imaging , Female , Male , Pregnancy , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/diagnostic imaging , Psychotic Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Rats , Schizophrenia/diagnostic imaging , White Matter/diagnostic imaging
2.
Schizophr Bull ; 44(2): 432-442, 2018 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28586483

ABSTRACT

Dysfunction of mitochondria, key players in various essential cell processes, has been repeatedly reported in schizophrenia (SZ). Recently, several studies have reported functional recovery and cellular viability following mitochondrial transplantation, mostly in ischemia experimental models. Here, we aimed to demonstrate beneficial effects of isolated active normal mitochondria (IAN-MIT) transfer in vitro and in vivo, using SZ-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) differentiating into glutamatergic neuron, as well as a rodent model of SZ. First, we show that IAN-MIT enter various cell types without manipulation. Next, we show that IAN-MIT transfer into SZ-derived lymphoblasts induces long-lasting improvement in various mitochondrial functions including cellular oxygen consumption and mitochondrial membrane potential (Δ ψ m). We also demonstrate improved differentiation of SZ-derived iPSCs into neurons, by increased expression of neuronal and glutamatergic markers ß3-tubulin, synapsin1, and Tbr1 and by an activation of the glutamate-glutamine cycle. In the animal model, we show that intra-prefrontal cortex injection of IAN-MIT in adolescent rats exposed prenatally to a viral mimic prevents mitochondrial Δ ψ m and attentional deficit at adulthood. Our results provide evidence for a direct link between mitochondrial function and SZ-related deficits both in vitro and in vivo and suggest a therapeutic potential for IAN-MIT transfer in diseases with bioenergetic and neurodevelopmental abnormalities such as SZ.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cognitive Dysfunction , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Mitochondria , Neurons/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex , Schizophrenia , Animals , Attention/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Cells, Cultured , Cognitive Dysfunction/metabolism , Cognitive Dysfunction/physiopathology , Cognitive Dysfunction/therapy , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Humans , Male , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondria/transplantation , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Schizophrenia/metabolism , Schizophrenia/therapy
3.
Brain Behav Immun ; 63: 35-49, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28189716

ABSTRACT

Early immune activation (IA) in rodents, prenatal through the mother or early postnatal directly to the neonate, is widely used to produce behavioral endophenotypes relevant to schizophrenia and depression. Given that maternal immune response plays a crucial role in the deleterious effects of prenatal IA, and lactation is a critical vehicle of immunological support to the neonate, we predicted that immune activation of the lactating dam will produce long-term abnormalities in the sucklings. Nursing dams were injected on postnatal day 4 with the viral mimic poly-I:C (4mg/kg) or saline. Cytokine assessment was performed in dams' plasma and milk 2h, and in the sucklings' hippocampus, 6h and 24h following poly-I:C injection. Male and female sucklings were assessed in adulthood for: a) performance on behavioral tasks measuring constructs considered relevant to schizophrenia (selective attention and executive control) and depression (despair and anhedonia); b) response to relevant pharmacological treatments; c) brain structural changes. Maternal poly-I:C injection caused cytokine alterations in the dams' plasma and milk, as well as in the sucklings' hippocampus. Lactational poly-I:C exposure led to sex-dimorphic (non-overlapping) behavioral abnormalities in the adult offspring, with male but not female offspring exhibiting attentional and executive function abnormalities (manifested in persistent latent inhibition and slow reversal) and hypodopaminergia, and female but not male offspring exhibiting despair and anhedonia (manifested in increased immobility in the forced swim test and reduced saccharine preference) and hyperdopaminergia, mimicking the known sex-bias in schizophrenia and depression. The behavioral double-dissociation predicted distinct pharmacological profiles, recapitulating the pharmacology of negative/cognitive symptoms and depression. In-vivo imaging revealed hippocampal and striatal volume reductions in both sexes, as found in both disorders. This is the first evidence for the emergence of long-term behavioral and brain abnormalities after lactational exposure to an inflammatory agent, supporting a causal link between early immune activation and disrupted neuropsychodevelopment. That such exposure produces schizophrenia- or depression-like phenotype depending on sex, resonates with notions that risk factors are transdiagnostic, and that sex is a susceptibility factor for neurodevelopmental psychopathologies.


Subject(s)
Depression/immunology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/immunology , Schizophrenia/immunology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Brain/drug effects , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Cytokines/immunology , Disease Models, Animal , Dopamine/pharmacology , Female , Hippocampus/drug effects , Lactation/drug effects , Lactation/metabolism , Male , Motor Activity/drug effects , Neurodevelopmental Disorders/immunology , Poly I-C/pharmacology , Pregnancy , Psychopathology/methods , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Sex Factors
4.
Exp Neurol ; 283(Pt A): 142-50, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27302677

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia is a debilitating psychiatric disorder with a significant number of patients not adequately responding to treatment. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a surgical technique currently investigated for medically-refractory psychiatric disorders. Here, we use the poly I:C rat model of schizophrenia to study the effects of medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and nucleus accumbens (Nacc) DBS on two behavioral schizophrenia-like deficits, i.e. sensorimotor gating, as reflected by disrupted prepulse inhibition (PPI), and attentional selectivity, as reflected by disrupted latent inhibition (LI). In addition, the neurocircuitry influenced by DBS was studied using FDG PET. We found that mPFC- and Nacc-DBS alleviated PPI and LI abnormalities in poly I:C offspring, whereas Nacc- but not mPFC-DBS disrupted PPI and LI in saline offspring. In saline offspring, mPFC-DBS increased metabolism in the parietal cortex, striatum, ventral hippocampus and Nacc, while reducing it in the brainstem, cerebellum, hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray. Nacc-DBS, on the other hand, increased activity in the ventral hippocampus and olfactory bulb and reduced it in the septal area, brainstem, periaqueductal gray and hypothalamus. In poly I:C offspring changes in metabolism following mPFC-DBS were similar to those recorded in saline offspring, except for a reduced activity in the brainstem and hypothalamus. In contrast, Nacc-DBS did not induce any statistical changes in brain metabolism in poly I:C offspring. Our study shows that mPFC- or Nacc-DBS delivered to the adult progeny of poly I:C treated dams improves deficits in PPI and LI. Despite common behavioral responses, stimulation in the two targets induced different metabolic effects.


Subject(s)
Brain/diagnostic imaging , Deep Brain Stimulation , Gait Disorders, Neurologic/etiology , Mental Disorders/etiology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Schizophrenia/complications , Schizophrenia/pathology , Acoustic Stimulation , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Brain/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18/pharmacokinetics , Interferon Inducers/toxicity , Male , Mental Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Nucleus Accumbens/physiology , Poly I-C/toxicity , Positron-Emission Tomography , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Prepulse Inhibition/physiology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Schizophrenia/chemically induced , Schizophrenia/diagnostic imaging
5.
Sci Rep ; 6: 19106, 2016 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26742695

ABSTRACT

Maternal immune activation (MIA) resulting from prenatal exposure to infectious pathogens or inflammatory stimuli is increasingly recognized to play an important etiological role in neuropsychiatric disorders with neurodevelopmental features. MIA in pregnant rodents induced by injection of the synthetic double-stranded RNA, Poly I:C, a mimic of viral infection, leads to a wide spectrum of behavioral abnormalities as well as structural and functional defects in the brain. Previous MIA studies using poly I:C prenatal treatment suggested that neurophysiological alterations occur in the hippocampus. However, these investigations used only juvenile or adult animals. We postulated that MIA-induced alterations could occur earlier at neonatal/early postnatal stages. Here we examined the neurophysiological properties of cultured pyramidal-like hippocampal neurons prepared from neonatal (P0-P2) offspring of pregnant rats injected with poly I:C. Offspring neurons from poly I:C-treated mothers exhibited significantly lower intrinsic excitability and stronger spike frequency adaptation, compared to saline. A similar lower intrinsic excitability was observed in CA1 pyramidal neurons from hippocampal slices of two weeks-old poly I:C offspring. Cultured hippocampal neurons also displayed lower frequency of spontaneous firing, higher charge transfer of IPSCs and larger amplitude of miniature IPSCs. Thus, maternal immune activation leads to strikingly early neurophysiological abnormalities in hippocampal neurons.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Viral/pharmacology , Hippocampus/drug effects , Immunity, Innate/drug effects , Poly I-C/pharmacology , Pyramidal Cells/drug effects , Action Potentials/drug effects , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Female , Hippocampus/immunology , Hippocampus/pathology , Pregnancy , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/immunology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/pathology , Primary Cell Culture , Pyramidal Cells/immunology , Pyramidal Cells/pathology , Rats
6.
Brain Behav Immun ; 51: 240-251, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26327125

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia is associated with behavioral and brain structural abnormalities, of which the hippocampus appears to be one of the most consistent region affected. Previous studies performed on the poly I:C model of schizophrenia suggest that alterations in hippocampal synaptic transmission and plasticity take place in the offspring. However, these investigations yielded conflicting results and the neurophysiological alterations responsible for these deficits are still unclear. Here we performed for the first time a longitudinal study examining the impact of prenatal poly I:C treatment and of gender on hippocampal excitatory neurotransmission. In addition, we examined the potential preventive/curative effects of risperidone (RIS) treatment during the peri-adolescence period. Excitatory synaptic transmission was determined by stimulating Schaffer collaterals and monitoring fiber volley amplitude and slope of field-EPSP (fEPSP) in CA1 pyramidal neurons in male and female offspring hippocampal slices from postnatal days (PNDs) 18-20, 34, 70 and 90. Depression of hippocampal excitatory transmission appeared at juvenile age in male offspring of the poly I:C group, while it expressed with a delay in female, manifesting at adulthood. In addition, a reduced hippocampal size was found in both adult male and female offspring of poly I:C treated dams. Treatment with RIS at the peri-adolescence period fully restored in males but partly repaired in females these deficiencies. A maturation- and sex-dependent decrease in hippocampal excitatory transmission occurs in the offspring of poly I:C treated pregnant mothers. Pharmacological intervention with RIS during peri-adolescence can cure in a gender-sensitive fashion early occurring hippocampal synaptic deficits.


Subject(s)
Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials , Hippocampus/physiopathology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/physiopathology , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/drug effects , Female , Hippocampus/drug effects , Hippocampus/growth & development , Male , Organ Size/drug effects , Poly I-C/administration & dosage , Pregnancy , Pyramidal Cells/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Risperidone/administration & dosage , Schizophrenia/chemically induced
7.
Schizophr Res ; 166(1-3): 238-47, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26055633

ABSTRACT

A growing body of evidence sheds light on the neurodevelopmental nature of schizophrenia with symptoms typically emerging during late adolescence or young adulthood. We compared the pre-symptomatic adolescence period with the full symptomatic period of adulthood at the behavioral and neurobiological level in the poly I:C maternal immune stimulation (MIS) rat model of schizophrenia. We found that in MIS-rats impaired sensorimotor gating, as reflected in disrupted prepusle inhibition (PPI), emerged post-pubertally, with behavioral deficits being only recorded in adulthood but not during adolescence. Using post mortem HPLC we found that MIS-rats show distinct dopamine and serotonin changes in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), nucleus accumbens (Nacc), caudate putamen, globus pallidus, and hippocampus. Further, FDG-PET has shown that these animals had lower glucose uptake in the ventral hippocampus and PFC and a higher metabolism in the amygdala and Nacc when compared to controls. Changes in neurotransmission and metabolic activity varied across brain structures with respect to first appearance and further development. In the mPFC and Hipp, MIS-rats showed abnormal neurochemical and metabolic activity prior to and with the development of behavioral deficits in both adolescent and adult states, reflecting an early impairment of these regions. In contrast, biochemical alteration in the Nacc and globus pallidus developed as a matter of age. Our findings suggest that MIS-induced neurochemical and metabolic changes are neurodevelopmental in nature and either progressive or non-progressive and that the behavioral deficits manifest as these abnormalities increase.


Subject(s)
Brain/growth & development , Brain/metabolism , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Sensory Gating/physiology , Animals , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Disease Models, Animal , Dopamine/metabolism , Female , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Glucose/metabolism , Male , Multimodal Imaging , Positron-Emission Tomography , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious , Radiopharmaceuticals , Rats, Wistar , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Schizophrenia/diagnostic imaging , Serotonin/metabolism , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
8.
Brain Stimul ; 6(4): 490-9, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23085443

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The development of more efficient treatment remains a major unmet need in the realm of schizophrenia disease. Using the maternal immune stimulation and the pubertal cannabinoid administration rat model of schizophrenia, the present study aimed at testing the hypothesis that deep brain stimulation (DBS) serves as a novel therapeutic technique for this disorder. METHODS: Adult offspring of dams, treated with the immune activating agent poly I:C (4 mg/kg, n = 50) or saline (n = 50), underwent bilateral stereotactic electrode implantation into one of the following brain regions: subthalamic nucleus (STN, n = 12/10), entopeduncularis nucleus (EP, n = 10/11), globus pallidus (GP, n = 10/10), medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC, n = 8/8), or dorsomedial thalamus (DM, n = 10/11). Adult rats treated with the CB1 receptor agonist WIN 55,212-2 (WIN, n = 16) or saline (n = 12) during puberty were bilaterally implanted with electrodes into either the mPFC (n = 8/6) or the DM (n = 8/6). After a post-operative recovery period of one week, all rats were tested on a well-established cross-species phenomenon that is disrupted in schizophrenia, the pre-pulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle reflex (ASR) under different DBS conditions. RESULTS: Poly I:C induced deficits in PPI of the ASR were normalized upon DBS. DBS effects depended on both stimulation target and stimulation parameters. Most prominent effects were found under DBS at high frequencies in the mPFC and DM. These effects were replicated in the pubertal WIN administration rat model of schizophrenia. CONCLUSIONS: Brain regions, in which DBS normalized PPI deficits, might be of therapeutic relevance to the treatment of schizophrenia. Results imply that DBS could be considered a plausible therapeutic technique in the realm of schizophrenia disease.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Brain Mapping , Brain/physiopathology , Deep Brain Stimulation/methods , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Rats , Rats, Wistar
9.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav ; 102(2): 203-14, 2012 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22542742

ABSTRACT

SAR110894 is a novel histamine H3-R ligand, displaying high and selective affinity for human, rat or mouse H3-Rs. SAR110894 is a potent H3-R antagonist at native receptors, reversing R-α-methylhistamine-induced inhibition of electrical field stimulation contraction in the guinea-pig ileum. Additionally, SAR110894 inhibited constitutive GTPγS binding at human H3-Rs demonstrating inverse agonist properties. In behavioral models addressing certain aspects of cognitive impairment associated with schizophrenia (CIAS) and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), SAR110894 improved memory performances in several variants of the object recognition task in mice (0.3-3 mg/kg, p.o.) or rats (0.3-1 mg/kg, p.o.). Moreover, SAR110894 (1 mg/kg, p.o.) reversed a deficit in working memory in the Y-maze test, following an acute low dose of phencyclidine (PCP) (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) in mice sensitized by repeated treatment with a high dose of PCP (10 mg/kg, i.p.). In the latent inhibition (LI) model, SAR110894 potentiated LI in saline-treated rats (1 and 3 mg/kg, i.p.) and reversed abnormally persistent LI induced by neonatal nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibition in rodents (0.3-3 mg/kg, i.p.). In a social novelty discrimination task in rats, SAR110894 attenuated selective attention deficit induced by neonatal PCP treatment (3 and 10 mg/kg, p.o.) or a parametric modification of the procedure (3 and 10 mg/kg, p.o.). SAR110894 showed efficacy in several animal models related to the cognitive deficits in Alzheimer's disease (AD). It prevented the occurrence of episodic memory deficit induced by scopolamine in rats (0.01-10 mg/kg, p.o.) or by the central infusion of the toxic amyloid fragment ß25₋35 in the object recognition test in mice (1 and 3 mg/kg, p.o.). Altogether, these findings suggest that SAR110894 may be of therapeutic interest for the treatment of the cognitive symptoms of AD, schizophrenia and certain aspects of ADHD.


Subject(s)
Cognition/drug effects , Histamine H3 Antagonists/pharmacology , Animals , Female , Histamine H3 Antagonists/therapeutic use , Maze Learning , Mice , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rats, Wistar , Schizophrenia/drug therapy
10.
Neuropharmacology ; 62(3): 1273-89, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21703648

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a neurodevelopmental disorder manifested symptomatically after puberty whose pharmacotherapy remains unsatisfactory. In recent years, longitudinal structural neuroimaging studies have revealed that neuroanatomical aberrations occur in this disorder and in fact precede symptom onset, raising the exciting possibility that SCZ can be prevented. There is some evidence that treatment with atypical antipsychotic drugs (APDs) prior to the development of the full clinical phenotype reduces the risk of transition to psychosis, but results remain controversial. It remains unknown whether progressive structural brain aberrations can be halted. Given the diagnostic, ethical, clinical and methodological problems of pharmacological and imaging studies in patients, getting such information remains a major challenge. Animal neurodevelopmental models of SCZ are invaluable for investigating such questions because they capture the notion that the effects of early brain damage are progressive. In recent years, data derived from such models have converged on key neuropathological and behavioral deficits documented in SCZ attesting to their strong validity, and making them ideal tools for evaluating progression of pathology following in-utero insults as well as its prevention. We review here our recent studies that use longitudinal in vivo structural imaging to achieve this aim in the prenatal immune stimulation model that is based on the association of prenatal infection and increased risk for SCZ. Pregnant rats were injected on gestational day 15 with the viral mimic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid (poly I:C) or saline. Male and female offspring were imaged and tested behaviorally on postnatal days (PNDs) 35, 46, 56, 70 and 90. In other experiments, offspring of poly I:C- and saline-treated dams received the atypical antipsychotic drugs (APDs) clozapine or risperidone in two developmental windows: PND 34-47 and PND 48-61, and underwent behavioral testing and imaging at adulthood. Prenatal poly I:C-induced interference with fetal brain development led to aberrant postnatal brain development as manifested in structural abnormalities in the hippocampus, the striatum, the prefrontal cortex and lateral ventricles (LV), as seen in SCZ. The specific trajectories were region-, age- and sex-specific, with females having delayed onset of pathology compared to males. Brain pathology was accompanied by development of behavioral abnormalities phenotypic of SCZ, attentional deficit and hypersensitivity to amphetamine, with same sex difference. Hippocampal volume loss and LV volume expansion as well as behavioral abnormalities were prevented in the offspring of poly I:C mothers who received clozapine or risperidone during the asymptomatic period of adolescence (PND 34-47). Administration at a later window, PNDs 48-61, exerted sex-, region- and drug- specific effects. Our data show that prenatal insult leads to progressive postnatal brain pathology, which gradually gives rise to "symptoms"; that treatment with atypical APDs can prevent both brain and behavioral pathology; and that the earlier the intervention, the more pathological outcomes can be prevented.


Subject(s)
Disease Models, Animal , Hippocampus/pathology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/physiopathology , Psychotic Disorders/etiology , Psychotic Disorders/prevention & control , Age Factors , Animals , Early Diagnosis , Female , Humans , Male , Pregnancy , Psychotic Disorders/diagnosis , Rats
11.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 37(2): 200-12, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21723667

ABSTRACT

Epidemiological and clinical life cycle studies indicate that favorable illness course and better response to antipsychotic drugs (APDs) in women with schizophrenia are positively correlated with estrogen levels. Accordingly, the estrogen hypothesis of schizophrenia proposes a neuroprotective role of estrogen in women vulnerable to schizophrenia. Previously we demonstrated in the rat that low levels of estrogen induced by ovariectomy led to disruption of latent inhibition (LI) reflecting impairment of selective attention, a core deficit of schizophrenia. LI disruption was reversed by 17ß-estradiol and the atypical APD clozapine, whereas the typical APD haloperidol was ineffective unless co-administered with 17ß-estradiol. Here we aimed to extend these findings by testing ovariectomized rats in another selective attention task, discrimination reversal. Ovariectomy led to a loss of selective attention as manifested in abnormally rapid reversal. The latter was normalized by high dose of 17ß-estradiol (150 µg/kg) and clozapine (2.5mg/kg), but not by haloperidol (0.1mg/kg) or lower doses of 17ß-estradiol (10 and 50 µg/kg). However, co-administration of haloperidol with 17ß-estradiol (50 µg/kg) was effective. In sham rats low 17ß-estradiol (10 µg/kg) produced rapid reversal, while high 17ß-estradiol (150 µg/kg), haloperidol alone, or haloperidol-17ß-estradiol combination reduced reversal speed. Clozapine did not affect reversal speed in sham rats. These results strengthen our previous results in suggesting that schizophrenia-like attentional abnormalities as well as reduced response to APDs in female rats are associated with low level of gonadal hormones. In addition, they support the possibility that estrogen may have an antipsychotic-like action in animal models.


Subject(s)
Antipsychotic Agents/pharmacology , Attention/drug effects , Discrimination Learning/drug effects , Estradiol/pharmacology , Ovariectomy/psychology , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Clozapine/pharmacology , Clozapine/therapeutic use , Estradiol/therapeutic use , Estrogens/pharmacology , Estrogens/therapeutic use , Female , Haloperidol/pharmacology , Haloperidol/therapeutic use , Models, Animal , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reversal Learning/drug effects , Schizophrenia/drug therapy , Schizophrenia/physiopathology
12.
Brain Behav Immun ; 26(2): 353-63, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22154704

ABSTRACT

Maternal infection in pregnancy is an environmental risk factor for the development of schizophrenia and related disorders in the offspring, and this association is recapitulated in animal models using gestational infection or immune stimulation. We have recently shown that behavioral abnormalities and altered hippocampal morphology emerging in adult offspring of dams treated with the viral mimic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidilic acid (poly I:C) are prevented by treatment with the atypical antipsychotic drug risperidone (RIS) in adolescence. Here we used a battery of cellular markers and Nissl stain to morphometrically analyze different hippocampal cell populations in the offspring of poly I:C and saline-treated mothers that received saline or RIS in adolescence, at different time points of postnatal development. We report that impaired neurogenesis, disturbed micro-vascularization and loss of parvalbumin-expressing hippocampal interneurons, are found in the offspring of poly I:C-treated dams. Most, but not all, of these neuropathological changes are not present in poly I:C offspring that had been treated with RIS. These effects may be part of the complex processes underlying the capacity of RIS treatment in adolescence to prevent structural and behavioral abnormalities deficits in the poly I:C offspring.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus/drug effects , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Risperidone/pharmacology , Serotonin Antagonists/pharmacology , Animals , Bromodeoxyuridine/pharmacology , Female , Hippocampus/blood supply , Hippocampus/embryology , Hippocampus/growth & development , Male , Neurogenesis/drug effects , Poly I-C/pharmacology , Pregnancy , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/chemically induced , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/immunology , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/physiopathology , Rats , Rats, Wistar
13.
Biol Psychiatry ; 70(9): 842-51, 2011 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21816387

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Environmental or genetic disturbances of early brain development are suggested to underlie the pathophysiology of several adult-onset neuropsychiatric disorders. We traced the developmental trajectories of brain structural and behavioral abnormalities from adolescence to young adulthood in rats born to mothers exposed to the viral mimic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid (poly-I:C) in pregnancy. METHODS: Pregnant rats were injected on gestational day 15 with poly-I:C (4 mg/kg) or saline. Volumes of lateral ventricles, hippocampus, striatum, and prefrontal cortex in male and female offspring were assessed longitudinally at postnatal days 35, 46, 56, 70, and 90 using in vivo magnetic resonance imaging. At parallel time windows, groups of offspring from the same litters underwent behavioral testing (latent inhibition and amphetamine-induced activity) and magnetic resonance imaging (cross-sectional assessment). RESULTS: The specific developmental trajectories of volumetric changes in both control and poly-I:C offspring were region-, age-, and sex-specific, but overall, poly-I:C offspring had smaller volumes of the hippocampus, striatum and prefrontal cortex, and larger ventricular volume. Structural pathology in different regions had different times of onset and was gradually accompanied by behavioral deficits, disrupted latent inhibition, and excessive amphetamine-induced activity. The onset of structural frontocortical and ventricular abnormalities and behavioral abnormalities was delayed in females. In both sexes, hippocampal and striatal volume reduction predated the appearance of behavioral abnormalities. CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal insult interferes with postnatal brain maturation, which in turn may result in behavioral abnormalities.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Central Nervous System/embryology , Central Nervous System/growth & development , Poly I-C/toxicity , Aging/physiology , Amphetamine/pharmacology , Animals , Central Nervous System/drug effects , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Corpus Striatum/growth & development , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Dopamine Uptake Inhibitors/pharmacology , Female , Hippocampus/drug effects , Hippocampus/growth & development , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Lateral Ventricles/drug effects , Lateral Ventricles/growth & development , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Motor Activity/drug effects , Phenotype , Prefrontal Cortex/drug effects , Prefrontal Cortex/growth & development , Pregnancy , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reflex, Startle/drug effects , Sex Characteristics
14.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav ; 99(2): 164-89, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21420999

ABSTRACT

Several developments have converged to drive what may be called "the cognitive revolution" in drug discovery in schizophrenia (SCZ), including the emphasis on cognitive deficits as a core disabling aspect of SCZ, the increasing consensus that cognitive deficits are not treated satisfactorily by the available antipsychotic drugs (APDs), and the failure of animal models to predict drug efficacy for cognitive deficits in clinical trials. Consequently, in recent years, a paradigm shift has been encouraged in animal modeling, triggered by the NIMH sponsored Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia (MATRICS) initiative, and intended to promote the development and use of behavioral measures in animals that can generate valid (clinically relevant) measures of cognition and thus promote the identification of cognition enhancers for SCZ. Here, we provide a non-exhaustive survey of the effects of putative cognition enhancers (PCEs) representing 10 pharmacological targets as well as antipsychotic drugs (APDs), on SCZ-mimetic drugs (NMDA antagonists, muscarinic antagonist scopolamine and dopaminergic agonist amphetamine), in several tasks considered to measure cognitive processes/domains that are disrupted in SCZ (the five choice serial reaction time task, sustain attention task, working and/or recognition memory (delayed (non)matching to sample, delayed alternation task, radial arm maze, novel object recognition), reversal learning, attentional set shifting, latent inhibition and spatial learning and memory). We conclude that most of the available models have no capacity to distinguish between PCEs and APDs and that there is a need to establish models based on tasks whose perturbations lead to performance impairments that are resistant to APDs, and/or to accept APDs as a "weak gold standard". Several directions derived from the surveyed data are suggested.


Subject(s)
Nootropic Agents/pharmacology , Schizophrenia/drug therapy , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/pharmacology , Attention/drug effects , Attention/physiology , Cognition/drug effects , Cognition/physiology , Executive Function/drug effects , Executive Function/physiology , Humans , Inhibition, Psychological , Memory/drug effects , Memory/physiology , Mice , Models, Animal , Rats , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Schizophrenic Psychology
15.
Int J Neuropsychopharmacol ; 14(9): 1233-46, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21211109

ABSTRACT

A major challenge in developing schizophrenia pharmacotherapy is treating the different symptoms of this disorder, typically divided into positive, negative and cognitive symptoms. M1/M4 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) agonists have emerged as a promising therapeutic target, particularly for positive and cognitive symptoms. Here, we examined the activity of the M1/M4 mAChR-preferring agonist xanomeline in four pharmacological latent inhibition (LI) models. LI is the poorer conditioning to a stimulus previously experienced as irrelevant during repeated non-reinforced pre-exposure to that stimulus. No-drug controls displayed LI if non-reinforced pre-exposure to a tone was followed by weak, but not strong, conditioning (2 vs. 5 tone-shock pairings). Amphetamine (1 mg/kg)- or scopolamine (0.15 mg/kg)-treated rats failed to show LI with weak conditioning, whereas MK801 (0.05 mg/kg)- or scopolamine (1.5 mg/kg)-treated rats persisted in displaying LI with strong conditioning. Xanomeline (5 mg/kg, 15 mg/kg) reversed amphetamine- and scopolamine-induced LI disruption, effects considered predictive of activity against positive symptoms of schizophrenia. In addition, xanomeline alleviated MK801-induced abnormally persistent LI. Activity of xanomeline on NMDA antagonist-induced behaviour was demonstrated here for the first time and suggests that the drug is effective against negative/cognitive symptoms. Finally, xanomeline alleviated abnormally persistent LI induced by scopolamine, which was suggested to model antipsychotic drug-resistant cognitive impairments, providing further evidence for the cognition-enhancing capacity of xanomeline. Although the use of xanomeline in schizophrenia was discontinued due to cholinergic-related side-effects, our findings suggest that M1/M4 mAChR agonism should be an important target in drug development in schizophrenia, potentially beneficial for treatment of positive, negative and cognitive symptoms.


Subject(s)
Antimanic Agents/therapeutic use , Muscarinic Agonists/therapeutic use , Neural Inhibition/drug effects , Pyridines/therapeutic use , Receptor, Muscarinic M1/agonists , Receptor, Muscarinic M4/agonists , Schizophrenia/drug therapy , Thiadiazoles/therapeutic use , Amphetamine/toxicity , Animals , Antimanic Agents/administration & dosage , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Cognition Disorders/etiology , Cognition Disorders/prevention & control , Dizocilpine Maleate/toxicity , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Kinetics , Male , Molecular Targeted Therapy , Muscarinic Agonists/administration & dosage , Neurotransmitter Agents/toxicity , Pyridines/administration & dosage , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/antagonists & inhibitors , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Schizophrenia/prevention & control , Scopolamine/toxicity , Tachyphylaxis , Thiadiazoles/administration & dosage
16.
Schizophr Bull ; 37(6): 1257-69, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20439320

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia is a disorder of a neurodevelopmental origin manifested symptomatically after puberty. Structural neuroimaging studies show that neuroanatomical aberrations precede onset of symptoms, raising a question of whether schizophrenia can be prevented. Early treatment with atypical antipsychotics may reduce the risk of transition to psychosis, but it remains unknown whether neuroanatomical abnormalities can be prevented. We have recently shown, using in vivo structural magnetic resonance imaging, that treatment with the atypical antipsychotic clozapine during an asymptomatic period of adolescence prevents the emergence of schizophrenia-like brain structural abnormalities in adult rats exposed to prenatal immune challenge, in parallel to preventing behavioral abnormalities. Here we assessed the preventive efficacy of the atypical antipsychotic risperidone (RIS). Pregnant rats were injected on gestational day 15 with the viral mimic polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic acid (poly I:C) or saline. Their male offspring received daily RIS (0.045 or 1.2 mg/kg) or vehicle injection in peri-adolescence (postnatal days [PND] 34-47). Structural brain changes and behavior were assessed at adulthood (from PND 90). Adult offspring of poly I:C-treated dams exhibited hallmark structural abnormalities associated with schizophrenia, enlarged lateral ventricles and smaller hippocampus. Both of these abnormalities were absent in the offspring of poly I:C dams that received RIS at peri-adolescence. This was paralleled by prevention of schizophrenia-like behavioral abnormalities, attentional deficit, and hypersensitivity to amphetamine in these offspring. We conclude that pharmacological intervention during peri-adolescence can prevent the emergence of behavioral abnormalities and brain structural pathology resulting from in utero insult. Furthermore, highly selective 5HT(2A) receptor antagonists may be promising targets for psychosis prevention.


Subject(s)
Antipsychotic Agents/pharmacology , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Brain/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Risperidone/pharmacology , Schizophrenia/prevention & control , Age Factors , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/administration & dosage , Brain/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Male , Pregnancy , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Risperidone/administration & dosage , Treatment Outcome
17.
Expert Rev Neurother ; 11(1): 29-32, 2011 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21158552

ABSTRACT

Maternal infection and/or inflammation during pregnancy has been repeatedly shown to elevate the risk of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders in offspring. However, the relative contribution of such immune-related prenatal insults to specific neuropathological outcomes in schizophrenia remains essentially unknown. The study by Ellman et al. is the first to explore whether prenatal levels of the proinflammatory cytokine, IL-8, are associated with the volume of specific brain regions in patients diagnosed with schizophrenia spectrum disorder. The authors provide new data to support a significant association between higher prenatal IL-8 levels in the second/third trimester of pregnancy and greater ventricular cerebrospinal fluid volume in adult schizophrenia spectrum cases. In addition, the results provide evidence for a significant relationship between higher prenatal IL-8 levels and lower volumes in the left entorhinal cortex and right posterior cingulate. The findings provided by Ellman et al., together with the results obtained in other epidemiological studies and experimental animal research, should encourage basic researchers and clinicians alike to make efforts towards the investigation of maternal immunomodulatory interventions that may help alleviate abnormal brain development and long-term psychotic illness in offspring.

18.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) ; 215(1): 149-63, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21181124

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: The psychotomimetic effects of cannabis are believed to be mediated via cannabinoid CB1 receptors. Furthermore, studies have implicated CB1 receptors in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. OBJECTIVE: These studies investigated the effects of the CB1 receptor antagonist, AVE1625, in acute pharmacological and neurodevelopmental models of schizophrenia. AVE1625 was administered to rodents alone or as a co-treatment with clinically used antipsychotic drugs (APDs). METHODS: The antipsychotic potential of AVE1625 was tested using psychotomimetic-induced hyperactivity and latent inhibition (LI) deficit models. The procognitive profile was assessed using hole board, novel object recognition, auditory evoked potential, and LI techniques. In addition, the side-effect profile was established by measuring catalepsy, antipsychotic-induced weight gain, plasma levels of prolactin, and anxiogenic potential. RESULTS: AVE1625 (1, 3, and 10 mg/kg ip), reversed abnormally persistent LI induced by MK-801 or neonatal nitric oxide synthase inhibition in rodents, and improved both working and episodic memory. AVE1625 was not active in positive symptom models but importantly, it did not diminish the efficacy of APDs. It also decreased catalepsy and weight gain induced by APDs, suggesting that it may decrease APD-induced extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) and compliance. Unlike other CB1 antagonists, AVE1625 did not produce anxiogenic-like effects. CONCLUSIONS: These preclinical data suggest that AVE1625 may be useful to treat the cognitive deficits in schizophrenia and as a co-treatment with currently available antipsychotics. In addition, an improved side-effect profile was seen, with potential to ameliorate the EPS and weight gain issues with currently available treatments.


Subject(s)
Antipsychotic Agents/adverse effects , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Cognition/drug effects , Hydrocarbons, Halogenated/therapeutic use , Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB1/antagonists & inhibitors , Schizophrenia/drug therapy , Sulfonamides/therapeutic use , Acoustic Stimulation , Amphetamine/pharmacology , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/administration & dosage , Anxiety/chemically induced , Anxiety/prevention & control , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Catalepsy/chemically induced , Catalepsy/prevention & control , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Drug Therapy, Combination , Evoked Potentials, Auditory/drug effects , Hydrocarbons, Halogenated/administration & dosage , Hydrocarbons, Halogenated/adverse effects , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Schizophrenia/metabolism , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Sulfonamides/administration & dosage , Sulfonamides/adverse effects , Weight Gain/drug effects
19.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 35(11): 2179-92, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20613719

ABSTRACT

The estrogen hypothesis of schizophrenia suggests that estrogen is a natural neuroprotector in women and that exogenous estrogen may have antipsychotic potential, but results of clinical studies have been inconsistent. We have recently shown using the latent inhibition (LI) model of schizophrenia that 17ß-estradiol exerts antipsychotic activity in ovariectomized (OVX) rats. The present study sought to extend the characterization of the antipsychotic action of 17ß-estradiol (10, 50 and 150 µg/kg) by testing its capacity to reverse amphetamine- and MK-801-induced LI aberrations in gonadally intact female and male rats. No-drug controls of both sexes showed LI, ie, reduced efficacy of a previously non-reinforced stimulus to gain behavioral control when paired with reinforcement, if conditioned with two but not five tone-shock pairings. In both sexes, amphetamine (1 mg/kg) and MK-801 (50 µg/kg) produced disruption (under weak conditioning) and persistence (under strong conditioning) of LI, modeling positive and negative/cognitive symptoms, respectively. 17ß-estradiol at 50 and 150 µg/kg potentiated LI under strong conditioning and reversed amphetamine-induced LI disruption in both males and females, mimicking the action of typical and atypical antipsychotic drugs (APDs) in the LI model. 17ß-estradiol also reversed MK-induced persistent LI, an effect mimicking atypical APDs and NMDA receptor enhancers, but this effect was observed in males and OVX females but not in intact females. These findings indicate that in the LI model, 17ß-estradiol exerts a clear-cut antipsychotic activity in both sexes and, remarkably, is more efficacious in males and OVX females where it also exerts activity considered predictive of anti-negative/cognitive symptoms.


Subject(s)
Antipsychotic Agents/pharmacology , Conditioning, Psychological/physiology , Disease Models, Animal , Estradiol/pharmacology , Inhibition, Psychological , Sex Characteristics , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/classification , Conditioning, Psychological/drug effects , Estradiol/physiology , Female , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Time Factors
20.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 35(7): 1570-82, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20237462

ABSTRACT

Women with schizophrenia have later onset and better response to antipsychotic drugs (APDs) than men during reproductive years, but the menopausal period is associated with increased symptom severity and reduced treatment response. Estrogen replacement therapy has been suggested as beneficial but clinical data are inconsistent. Latent inhibition (LI), the capacity to ignore irrelevant stimuli, is a measure of selective attention that is disrupted in acute schizophrenia patients and in rats and humans treated with the psychosis-inducing drug amphetamine and can be reversed by typical and atypical APDs. Here we used amphetamine (1 mg/kg)-induced disrupted LI in ovariectomized rats to model low levels of estrogen along with hyperfunction of the dopaminergic system that may be occurring in menopausal psychosis, and tested the efficacy of APDs and estrogen in reversing disrupted LI. 17beta-Estradiol (50, 150 microg/kg), clozapine (atypical APD; 5, 10 mg/kg), and haloperidol (typical APD; 0.1, 0.3 mg/kg) effectively reversed amphetamine-induced LI disruption in sham rats, but were much less effective in ovariectomized rats; 17beta-estradiol and clozapine were effective only at high doses (150 microg/kg and 10 mg/kg, respectively), whereas haloperidol failed at both doses. Haloperidol and clozapine regained efficacy if coadministered with 17beta-estradiol (50 microg/kg, an ineffective dose). Reduced sensitivity to dopamine (DA) blockade coupled with spared/potentiated sensitivity to DA stimulation after ovariectomy may provide a novel model recapitulating the combination of increased vulnerability to psychosis with reduced response to APD treatment in female patients during menopause. In addition, our data show that 17beta-estradiol exerts antipsychotic activity.


Subject(s)
Dopamine/metabolism , Estradiol/therapeutic use , Estrogens/therapeutic use , Inhibition, Psychological , Psychotic Disorders/drug therapy , Psychotic Disorders/metabolism , Amphetamine/adverse effects , Animals , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Clozapine/therapeutic use , Disease Models, Animal , Dopamine Uptake Inhibitors/adverse effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Interactions , Estradiol/blood , Female , Haloperidol/therapeutic use , Ovariectomy/methods , Psychotic Disorders/etiology , Psychotic Disorders/physiopathology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Statistics, Nonparametric , Water Deprivation
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