Olanzapine, but not haloperidol, exerts pronounced acute metabolic effects in the methylazoxymethanol rat model

Author:

Horska Katerina1ORCID,Skrede Silje23,Kucera Jan45ORCID,Kuzminova Gabriela1,Suchy Pavel1ORCID,Micale Vincenzo6ORCID,Ruda‐Kucerova Jana7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Pharmacy Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

2. Department of Clinical Science, Faculty of Medicine University of Bergen Bergen Norway

3. Section of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Pharmacology Haukeland University Hospital Bergen Norway

4. RECETOX, Faculty of Science Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

5. Department of Physical Activities and Health, Faculty of Sports Studies Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

6. Department of Biomedical and Biotechnological Sciences, Section of Pharmacology University of Catania Catania Italy

7. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

Abstract

AbstractAimWidely used second‐generation antipsychotics are associated with adverse metabolic effects, contributing to increased cardiovascular mortality. To develop strategies to prevent or treat adverse metabolic effects, preclinical models have a clear role in uncovering underlying molecular mechanisms. However, with few exceptions, preclinical studies have been performed in healthy animals, neglecting the contribution of dysmetabolic features inherent to psychotic disorders.MethodsIn this study, methylazoxymethanol acetate (MAM) was prenatally administered to pregnant Sprague–Dawley rats at gestational day 17 to induce a well‐validated neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia mimicking its assumed pathogenesis with persistent phenotype. Against this background, the dysmetabolic effects of acute treatment with olanzapine and haloperidol were examined in female rats.ResultsPrenatally MAM‐exposed animals exhibited several metabolic features, including lipid disturbances. Half of the MAM rats exposed to olanzapine had pronounced serum lipid profile alteration compared to non‐MAM controls, interpreted as a reflection of a delicate MAM‐induced metabolic balance disrupted by olanzapine. In accordance with the drugs' clinical metabolic profiles, olanzapine‐associated dysmetabolic effects were more pronounced than haloperidol‐associated dysmetabolic effects in non‐MAM rats and rats exposed to MAM.ConclusionOur results demonstrate metabolic vulnerability in female prenatally MAM‐exposed rats, indicating that findings from healthy animals likely provide an underestimated impression of metabolic dysfunction associated with antipsychotics. In the context of metabolic disturbances, neurodevelopmental models possess a relevant background, and the search for adequate animal models should receive more attention within the field of experimental psychopharmacology.

Funder

Norway Grants

Publisher

Wiley

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