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1.
Pain ; 163(5): 809-819, 2022 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34510137

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Many analgesics inadequately address the psychiatric comorbidities of chronic and persistent pain, but there is no standard preclinical model of pain-altered behavior to support the development of new therapies. To explore this conflicting and inconclusive literature, we conducted a focused systematic review and meta-analysis on the effect of complete Freund adjuvant-induced (CFA) rodent hind paw inflammation on multiple classical indicators of exploratory behavior, stress coping, and naturalistic behavior. Our primary objective was to define CFA's effect on assays including, but not limited to, the elevated plus maze and forced swim test. Our secondary objective was to discover how variables such as species and strain may influence outcomes in such assays. We searched Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science in April and October 2020 for studies with adult rodents injected with CFA into the hind paw and subsequently tested for aspects of "anxiety-like" or "depressive-like" behaviors. Forty-four studies evaluated performance in the elevated plus or zero maze, open field test, light-dark box, place escape and avoidance paradigm, forced swim test, tail suspension test, sucrose preference test, wheel running, and burrowing assay. Complete Freund adjuvant modestly but significantly decreased exploratory behavior, significantly increased passive stress coping in the tail suspension test but not the forced swim test, and significantly decreased preference for sucrose and naturally rewarding activity. Subgroup analyses revealed significant differences between species and animal sourcing. Based on the evidence provided here, we conclude future studies should focus on CFA's effect on natural rewards and naturalistic behaviors.


Subject(s)
Motor Activity , Rodentia , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Disease Models, Animal , Freund's Adjuvant/toxicity , Pain/chemically induced , Pain/psychology , Sucrose/pharmacology
2.
Pain ; 162(6): 1705-1721, 2021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33433146

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Pain puts patients at risk for developing psychiatric conditions such as anxiety and depression. Preclinical mouse models of pain-induced affective behavior vary widely in methodology and results, impairing progress towards improved therapeutics. To systematically investigate the effect of long-term inflammatory pain on exploratory behavior and stress coping strategy, we assessed male C57BL/6J mice in the forced swim test (FST), elevated zero maze, and open field test at 4 and 6 weeks postinjection of Complete Freund's Adjuvant, while controlling for testing order and combination. Inflammatory pain did not induce a passive stress coping strategy in the FST and did not reduce exploratory behavior in the elevated zero maze or the open field test. Using systematic correlational analysis and composite behavioral scores, we found no consistent association among measures for mice with or without inflammatory pain. A meta-analysis of similar studies indicated a modest, significant effect of Complete Freund's Adjuvant on exploratory behavior, but not immobility in the FST, and high heterogeneity among effect sizes in all 3 paradigms. Given the urgency for understanding the mechanisms of pain comorbidities and identifying novel therapies, these findings support the reallocation of our limited resources away from such unreliable assays and toward motivated and naturalistic behaviors. Future studies in pain and psychiatric translational research may benefit by considering outcomes beyond binary categorization, quantifying the associations between multiple measured behaviors, and agnostically identifying subtle yet meaningful patterns in behaviors.


Subject(s)
Exploratory Behavior , Pain , Adaptation, Psychological , Animals , Anxiety , Behavior, Animal , Depression/etiology , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Male , Maze Learning , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Pain/etiology
3.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 43(2): 272-284, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28462942

ABSTRACT

Chronic social defeat stress regulates the expression of Fosb in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) to promote the cell-type-specific accumulation of ΔFosB in the two medium spiny neuron (MSN) subtypes in this region. ΔFosB is selectively induced in D1-MSNs in the NAc of resilient mice, and in D2-MSNs of susceptible mice. However, little is known about the consequences of such selective induction, particularly in D2-MSNs. This study examined how cell-type-specific control of the endogenous Fosb gene in NAc regulates susceptibility to social defeat stress. Histone post-translational modifications (HPTMs) were targeted specifically to Fosb using engineered zinc-finger proteins (ZFPs). Fosb-ZFPs were fused to either the transcriptional repressor, G9a, which promotes histone methylation or the transcriptional activator, p65, which promotes histone acetylation. These ZFPs were expressed in D1- vs D2-MSNs using Cre-dependent viral expression in the NAc of mice transgenic for Cre recombinase in these MSN subtypes. We found that stress susceptibility is oppositely regulated by the specific cell type and HPTM targeted. We report that Fosb-targeted histone acetylation in D2-MSNs or histone methylation in D1-MSNs promotes a stress-susceptible, depressive-like phenotype, while histone methylation in D2-MSNs or histone acetylation in D1-MSNs increases resilience to social stress as quantified by social interaction behavior and sucrose preference. This work presents the first demonstration of cell- and gene-specific targeting of histone modifications, which model naturally occurring transcriptional phenomena that control social defeat stress behavior. This epigenetic-editing approach, which recapitulates physiological changes in gene expression, reveals clear differences in the social defeat phenotype induced by Fosb gene manipulation in MSN subtypes.


Subject(s)
Depression/genetics , Dominance-Subordination , Epigenesis, Genetic/genetics , Nucleus Accumbens/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/genetics , Receptors, Dopamine D1/metabolism , Receptors, Dopamine D2/metabolism , Stress, Psychological/genetics , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Disease Models, Animal , Disease Susceptibility , Male , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Phenotype
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