The Flinders Sensitive Line Rat Model of Depression-25 Years and Still Producing

被引:181
作者
Overstreet, David H. [1 ,2 ]
Wegener, Gregers [3 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Dept Psychiat, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
[2] Univ N Carolina, Ctr Alcohol Studies, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
[3] Aarhus Univ, Ctr Psychiat Res, Risskov, Denmark
[4] Aarhus Univ Hosp, Risskov, Denmark
[5] North West Univ, Unit Drug Res & Dev, Sch Pharm Pharmacol, Potchefstroom, South Africa
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
GENETIC ANIMAL-MODEL; INCREASED CHOLINERGIC FUNCTION; WISTAR-KYOTO RATS; ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION-MODEL; SWIM TEST IMMOBILITY; RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST; NEUROPEPTIDE-Y; RESISTANT LINE; BRAIN-REGIONS; FSL RAT;
D O I
10.1124/pr.111.005397
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Approximately 25 years have passed since the first publication suggesting the Flinders sensitive line (FSL) rat as an animal model of depression. At least 6 years of research on these rats was completed before that seminal paper, and there has been a steady stream of publications (130+) over the years. The present review will focus on several issues not previously covered in earlier reviews, summarize the several lines of ongoing investigations, and propose a novel mechanism that accounts for a number of previously unexplained observations. A key observation in the FSL rat relates to the antidepressant (AD)like effects of known and putative antidepressants. The FSL rat typically exhibits an AD-like effect in behavioral tests for AD-like activity following chronic (14 days) treatment, although some studies have found AD-like effects after fewer days of treatment. In other observations, exaggerated swim test immobility in the FSL rat has been found to have a maternal influence, as shown by cross-fostering studies and observations of maternal behavior; the implications of this finding are still to be determined. Ongoing or recently completed studies have been performed in the laboratories of Marko Diksic of Canada, Aleksander Mathe of Sweden, Gregers Wegener of Denmark, Brian Harvey of South Africa, Paul Pilowsky and Rod Irvine of Australia, and Gal Yadid of Israel. Jennifer Loftis of Portland, Oregon, and Lynette Daws of San Antonio, Texas, have been working with the FSL rats in the United States. A puzzling feature of the FSL rat is its sensitivity to multiple chemicals, and its greater sensitivity to a variety of drugs with different mechanisms of action. It has been recently shown that each of these drugs feeds through G protein-coupled receptors to potassium-gated channels. Thus, an abnormality in the potassium channel could underlie the depressed-like behavior of the FSL rats.
引用
收藏
页码:143 / 155
页数:13
相关论文
共 155 条
  • [1] A high-fat diet exacerbates depressive-like behavior in the Flinders Sensitive Line (FSL) rat, a genetic model of depression
    Abildgaard, Anders
    Solskov, Lasse
    Volke, Vallo
    Harvey, Brian H.
    Lund, Sten
    Wegener, Gregers
    [J]. PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 2011, 36 (05) : 623 - 633
  • [2] Electroconvulsive stimuli alter nerve growth factor but not brain-derived neurotrophic factor concentrations in brains of a rat model of depression
    Angelucci, F
    Aloe, L
    Jiménez-Vasquez, P
    Mathé, AA
    [J]. NEUROPEPTIDES, 2003, 37 (01) : 51 - 56
  • [3] SEROTONIN UPTAKE AND IMIPRAMINE BINDING IN BLOOD-PLATELETS AND BRAIN OF FAWN-HOODED AND SPRAGUE DAWLEY RATS
    ARORA, RC
    TONG, C
    JACKMAN, HL
    STOFF, D
    MELTZER, HY
    [J]. LIFE SCIENCES, 1983, 33 (05) : 437 - 442
  • [4] FUNCTIONAL AND BIOCHEMICAL-EVIDENCE FOR ALTERED SEROTONERGIC FUNCTION IN THE FAWN-HOODED RAT STRAIN
    AULAKH, CS
    TOLLIVER, T
    WOZNIAK, KM
    HILL, JL
    MURPHY, DL
    [J]. PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR, 1994, 49 (03) : 615 - 620
  • [5] Stress sensitivity and the development of affective disorders
    Bale, Tracy L.
    [J]. HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR, 2006, 50 (04) : 529 - 533
  • [6] Increased basal REM sleep but no difference in dark induction or light suppression of REM sleep in flinders rats with cholinergic supersensitivity
    Benca, RM
    Overstreet, DE
    Gilliland, MA
    Russell, D
    Bergmann, BM
    Obermeyer, WH
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 1996, 15 (01) : 45 - 51
  • [7] THE ROLE OF PUTATIVE 5-HT1A AND 5-HT1B RECEPTORS IN THE CONTROL OF FEEDING IN RATS
    BENDOTTI, C
    SAMANIN, R
    [J]. LIFE SCIENCES, 1987, 41 (05) : 635 - 642
  • [8] Anxiety-like behaviors in pre-pubertal rats of the Flinders Sensitive Line (FSL) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) animal models of depression
    Braw, Y
    Malkesman, O
    Dagan, M
    Bercovich, A
    Lavi-Avnon, Y
    Schroeder, M
    Overstreet, DH
    Weller, A
    [J]. BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 167 (02) : 261 - 269
  • [9] Alterations in neuropeptide Y levels and Y1 binding sites in the Flinders Sensitive Line rats, a genetic animal model of depression
    Caberlotto, L
    Jimenez, P
    Overstreet, DH
    Hurd, YL
    Mathé, AA
    Fuxe, K
    [J]. NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1999, 265 (03) : 191 - 194
  • [10] Early-life stress and antidepressants modulate peripheral biomarkers in a gene-environment rat model of depression
    Carboni, Lucia
    Becchi, Serena
    Piubelli, Chiara
    Mallei, Alessandra
    Giambelli, Roberto
    Razzoli, Maria
    Mathe, Aleksander A.
    Popoli, Maurizio
    Domenici, Enrico
    [J]. PROGRESS IN NEURO-PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY & BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2010, 34 (06) : 1037 - 1048