揭露小鼠的焦虑样行为:使用一种新的光-热冲突测试揭示焦虑的性别差异。

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of Neuroscience Research Pub Date : 2024-12-09 DOI:10.1002/jnr.70002
Sydney E. Lee, Sung-Hoon Park, John C. Aldrich, Laura K. Fonken, Andrew D. Gaudet
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引用次数: 0

摘要

焦虑和慢性疼痛折磨着全世界数亿人。焦虑和疼痛在女性中比男性更普遍。不幸的是,在啮齿动物的实验中,人类焦虑的强烈性别差异并没有重现,啮齿动物疼痛研究的结果经常不能转化为临床。因此,有必要开发一种测试方法,以反映男女之间焦虑或疼痛相关刺激的不同显著性。因此,本文介绍了热增量暗光冲突测试。潮汐测试将与焦虑相关的刺激(黑暗与明亮的房间)与热相关的刺激(渐进加热与等温的房间)相冲突;老鼠可以自由地探索两个仪器室。在这里,我们的目的是确定潮汐冲突测试是否揭示了小鼠在焦虑和/或热敏性方面被低估的性别差异。我们在四个不同的实验中发现,在潮汐冲突测试中,雌性老鼠在黑暗加热的盘子上坚持的时间更长,这表明雌性老鼠表现出更高的焦虑样行为。在潮汐冲突实验中,小鼠对加热暗板的偏好比两室均有照明的热板的偏好更强烈。我们还发现,一种缓解焦虑的药物帕罗西汀(paroxetine)降低了小鼠对加热暗板的偏好,支持了TIDAL测试的有效性。因此,我们新的潮汐冲突测试可靠地揭示了焦虑(相对于热敏性)的相对显著性:雌性小鼠表现出强烈的焦虑样行为,这在经典测试中并不一致。未来的研究应纳入潮汐和其他冲突测试,以更好地了解啮齿动物的行为,并确定焦虑和疼痛的潜在机制。
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Anxiety-Like Behaviors in Mice Unmasked: Revealing Sex Differences in Anxiety Using a Novel Light-Heat Conflict Test

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.

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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience Research
Journal of Neuroscience Research 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
2.40%
发文量
145
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neuroscience Research (JNR) publishes novel research results that will advance our understanding of the development, function and pathophysiology of the nervous system, using molecular, cellular, systems, and translational approaches. JNR covers both basic research and clinical aspects of neurology, neuropathology, psychiatry or psychology. The journal focuses on uncovering the intricacies of brain structure and function. Research published in JNR covers all species from invertebrates to humans, and the reports inform the readers about the function and organization of the nervous system, with emphasis on how disease modifies the function and organization.
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