Rats Lacking the Dopamine Transporter Display Inflexibility in Innate and Learned Behavior.

dopamine transporter dopamine transporter knockout rodents hyperdopaminergia learning

Journal

Biomedicines
ISSN: 2227-9059
Titre abrégé: Biomedicines
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101691304

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Jun 2024
Historique:
received: 09 05 2024
revised: 30 05 2024
accepted: 04 06 2024
medline: 27 6 2024
pubmed: 27 6 2024
entrez: 27 6 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Playing a key role in the organization of striatal motor output, the dopamine (DA)-ergic system regulates both innate and complex learned behaviors. Growing evidence clearly indicates the involvement of the DA-ergic system in different forms of repetitive (perseverative) behavior. Some of these behaviors accompany such disorders as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), Tourette's syndrome, schizophrenia, and addiction. In this study, we have traced how the inflexibility of repetitive reactions in the recently developed animal model of hyper-DA-ergia, dopamine transporter knockout rats (DAT-KO rats), affects the realization of innate behavior (grooming) and the learning of spatial (learning and reversal learning in T-maze) and non-spatial (extinction of operant reaction) tasks. We found that the microstructure of grooming in DAT-KO rats significantly differed in comparison to control rats. DAT-KO rats more often demonstrated a fixed syntactic chain, making fewer errors and very rarely missing the chain steps in comparison to control rats. DAT-KO rats' behavior during inter-grooming intervals was completely different to the control animals. During learning and reversal learning in the T-maze, DAT-KO rats displayed pronounced patterns of hyperactivity and perseverative (stereotypical) activity, which led to worse learning and a worse performance of the task. Most of the DAT-KO rats could not properly learn the behavioral task in question. During re-learning, DAT-KO rats demonstrated rigid perseverative activity even in the absence of any reinforcement. In operant tasks, the mutant rats demonstrated poor extinction of operant lever pressing: they continued to perform lever presses despite no there being reinforcement. Our results suggest that abnormally elevated DA levels may be responsible for behavioral rigidity. It is conceivable that this phenomenon in DAT-KO rats reflects some of the behavioral traits observed in clinical conditions associated with endogenous or exogenous hyper-DA-ergia, such as schizophrenia, substance abuse, OCD, patients with Parkinson disease treated with DA mimetics, etc. Thus, DAT-KO rats may be a valuable behavioral model in the search for new pharmacological approaches to treat such illnesses.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38927477
pii: biomedicines12061270
doi: 10.3390/biomedicines12061270
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Subventions

Organisme : Russian Science Foundation
ID : 21-75-20069
Organisme : St Petersburg University
ID : 95444211

Auteurs

Anastasia Belskaya (A)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.

Natalia Kurzina (N)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.

Artem Savchenko (A)

Valdman Institute of Pharmacology, Pavlov First St. Petersburg State Medical University, Saint Petersburg 197022, Russia.

Ilya Sukhanov (I)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.
Valdman Institute of Pharmacology, Pavlov First St. Petersburg State Medical University, Saint Petersburg 197022, Russia.

Arina Gromova (A)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.
Biological Faculty, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.

Raul R Gainetdinov (RR)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.
Saint Petersburg University Hospital, Saint Petersburg 190121, Russia.

Anna Volnova (A)

Institute of Translational Biomedicine, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.
Biological Faculty, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia.

Classifications MeSH