Affiliation:
1. Medical Psychology Unit, Department of Psychiatry and Forensic Medicine & Institute of Neurosciences, School of
Medicine, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Bellaterra, Barcelona, 08193, Spain
2. Department of Psychology,
Austral University of Chile, Valdivia, Chile
3. Department of Life and Environmental Sciences (DiSVA), University of
Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy
Abstract
Abstract:
Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder with high heterogeneity in its symptoms
clusters. The effectiveness of drug treatments for the disorder is far from satisfactory. It is widely
accepted that research with valid animal models is essential if we aim at understanding its genetic/
neurobiological mechanisms and finding more effective treatments. The present article presents an
overview of six genetically-based (selectively-bred) rat models/strains, which exhibit neurobehavioral
schizophrenia-relevant features, i.e., the Apomorphine-susceptible (APO-SUS) rats, the Low-prepulse
inhibition rats, the Brattleboro (BRAT) rats, the Spontaneously Hypertensive rats (SHR), the Wisket
rats and the Roman High-Avoidance (RHA) rats. Strikingly, all the strains display impairments in prepulse
inhibition of the startle response (PPI), which remarkably, in most cases are associated with
novelty-induced hyperlocomotion, deficits of social behavior, impairment of latent inhibition and cognitive
flexibility, or signs of impaired prefrontal cortex (PFC) function. However, only three of the
strains share PPI deficits and dopaminergic (DAergic) psychostimulant-induced hyperlocomotion
(together with prefrontal cortex dysfunction in two models, the APO-SUS and RHA), which points out
that alterations of the mesolimbic DAergic circuit are a schizophrenia-linked trait that not all models
reproduce, but it characterizes some strains that can be valid models of schizophrenia-relevant features
and drug-addiction vulnerability (and thus, dual diagnosis). We conclude by putting the research based
on these genetically-selected rat models in the context of the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC)
framework, suggesting that RDoC-oriented research programs using selectively-bred strains might
help to accelerate progress in the various aspects of the schizophrenia-related research agenda.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Pharmacology,General Medicine
Cited by
6 articles.
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