Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T12:50:38.689Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Modèles animaux sensibles aux antidépresseurs: implication des systèmes sérotoninergiques et noradrénergiques centraux

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2020

P Martin
Affiliation:
Département de pharmacologie, faculté de médecine Pitié-Salpêtrière, 91, boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75634 Paris Cedex 13, France
MH Thiébot
Affiliation:
Département de pharmacologie, faculté de médecine Pitié-Salpêtrière, 91, boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75634 Paris Cedex 13, France
AJ Puech
Affiliation:
Département de pharmacologie, faculté de médecine Pitié-Salpêtrière, 91, boulevard de l'Hôpital, 75634 Paris Cedex 13, France
Get access

Résumé

Tenter de vouloir modéliser chez l’animal une pathologie psychiatrique peut sembler tout à fait illusoire. Il est en revanche plus aisé d’analyser «les grandes fonctions» qui modulent le comportement, ainsi que les systèmes neurobiologiques impliqués dans leur régulation. À travers deux tests comportementaux sensibles aux antidépresseurs: le modèle de «Learned Helplessness» ou «renoncement appris» et le test du labyrinthe en T, mesurant une capacité à attendre; nous avons voulu montrer que les effets de substances antidépressives pouvaient agir sur deux dimensions différentes et de quelle(s) manière(s) pouvaient être impliqués les systèmes sérotoninergiques.

Summary

Summary

Behavioral models of psychiatric disorders do not simulate or reproduce human mental pathology in animals. However, it is possible to evaluate the behavioral and biochemical changes in experimental situations and to propose hypotheses concerning the functions of the CNS. Using 2 tests sensitive to antidepressant drugs: the learned helplessness paradigm and a test for waiting capacity in a T-maze, we investigated the involvement of serotoninergic or noradrenergic processes through 2 dimensions: the reversal of escape deficit and the tolerance to delay of reward.

Type
Article Original
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Références

Bizot, JC, Thiébot, MH, Le Bihan, C, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1988) Effects of Imipramine-Like Drugs and Serotonin Uptake Blockers on Delay of Reward in Rats. Possible Implication in the Behavioral Mechanism of Action of Antidepressants. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 246, 11441151Google ScholarPubMed
Dorworth, T, Overmier, JB (1977) On Learned Helplessness: the Therapeutic Effects of Electroconvulsive Shocks. Physiol Psychol 5, 355358CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herrnstein, RJ (1981) Self Control as Response Strength. In: Quantification of Steady State Operant Behavior (Bradshaw, CM, Szabadl, E, Lowe, CF, eds), Elsevier, Amsterdam, 3-20Google Scholar
Kraemer, GW, Ebert, MH, Lake, CR, McKinney, WT (1984) Cerebrospinal Fluid Measures of Neurotransmitter Changes Associated with Pharmacological Alteration of the Despair Response to Social Séparation in Rhesus Monkeys. Psychiatry Res 11, 303315CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kametani, H, Nomura, S, Shimizu, J (1983) The Reversal Effect of Antidepressant on Escape Déficit Induced by Inescapable Shock in Rats. Psychopharmacology 80, 206208CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Maier, SF, Seligman, MEP (1976) Learned Helplessness: Theory and Evidence. J Exp Psychol Gen 105, 346CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P, Brochet, D, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1985) Triiodothyronine-Induced Reversal of Learned Helplessness in Rats. Biol Psychiatry 20, 10231025CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1986a) Shuttle-box Deficits Induced by Inescapable Shocks in Rats: Reversal by the Beta-Adrenoceptor Stimulants Clenbuterol and Salbutamol. Phannacol Biochem Behav 24, 177181CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1986b) Noradrenergic and Opioid Mediation of Tricyclic-lnduced Reversal of Escape Deficits caused by Inescapable Shock Pretreatment in Rats. Psychopharmacology 90, 9094CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1987a) The Effect of Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors Compared with Classical Tricyclic Antidepressants on Learned Helplessness Paradigm. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 11, 17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P, Massol, J, Belon, JP, Gaudel, G, Soubrié, P (1987b) Thyroid Function and Reversal by Antidepressant Drugs of Depressive-Like Behavior (escape deficits) in Rats. Neuropsychobiology 18, 2126CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P, Laporte, AM, Soubrié, P, El, Mestikawy S, Hanton, M (1987c) Reversal of Helpless Behavior in Rats by Serotonin uptake Inhibitors. International Conférence Behavioural Pharmacology of 5-HT, Amsterdam, November 24-27Google Scholar
Martin, P, Beninger, R, Massol, J, Laporte, AM, El, Mestikawy S, Soubrié, P, Hamon, M, Puech, AJ (1988) Antidepressant-Like Action of 8-OH-DPAT, a 5-HT1A agonist, in the Learned Helplessness Paradigm: pre- or post-synaptic mechanism? XVIth Collegium Internationale Neuro-Psychopharmacologicum, Congress Munich, August 15-19, Psychophannacology 96, 262Google Scholar
Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Puech, AJ (1990a) New Approach of Learned Helplessness Paradigm in Rats: Effects of Antidepressant Drugs. Psychiatr Psychobiol (soumis)Google Scholar
Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Puech, AJ (1990b) Reversal of Helpless Behavior by Serotonin uptake Inhibitors in Rats. Psychopharmacology (in press)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Massol, J, Martin, P, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1987) Triiodothyroacetic Acid Induced Reversal of Learned Helplessness in Rats. Eur J Phannacol 134, 345348CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McElroy, JF, Dupont, AF, Feldman, RS (1982) The Effects of Fenfluramine and Fluoxetine on the Acquisition of a Conditioned Avoidance Response in Rats. Psychopharmacology 77, 356359CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McKinney, WT (1977) Biobehavioral Models of Depression in Monkeys. In: Animal Models in Psychiatry and Neurology (Usdin, E, Hanin, I, eds), Pergamon Press, Oxford, 117-126Google Scholar
Miller, WR, Rosellini, RA, Seligman, MEP (1977) Learned Helplessness and Depression. In: Psychopathology: Experimental Models (Maser, J, Seligman, MEP, eds) Freeman, San Francisco & Co, 104-130Google Scholar
Petty, F, Sherman, AD (1980) Regional Aspects of the Prevention of Learned Helplessness by Desiprarnine. Life Sci 26, 14471452CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seligman, MEP, Maier, SF (1967) Failure to Escape Traumatic Shock. J Exp Psychol 74, 19CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sherman, AD, Sacquitne, JL, Petty, F (1982) Specificity of the Learned Helplessness Model of Depression. Phannacol Biochem Behav 1, 449454CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soubrié, P, Martin, P, El, Mestikawy S, Thiébot, MH, Simon, P, Hamon, M (1986) The Lesion of Serotonergic Neurons does not prevent Antidepressant- Induced Reversal of Escape Failures Produced by Inescapable Shocks in Rats. Phannacol Biochem Behav 25, 16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soubrié, P, Martin, P, El, Mestikawy S, Hamon, M (1987) Delayed Behavioral Response to Antidepressant Drugs Following Selective Damage to the Hippocampal Noradrenergic Innvervation in Rats. Brain Res 437, 323331CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thiébot, MH, Le Bilian, C, Soubrié, P, Simon, P (1985) Benzodiazepines Reduce Tolerance to Reward delay in Rats. Psychopharmacology 86, 147152CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weiss, JM, Glazer, HI (1975) Effects of Acute Exposure to Stressors on Subsequent Avoidance-Escape Behavior. Psychosom Med 37, 499521CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.