Abstract
The onset of the therapeutic response to antidepressant treatment exhibits a characteristic delay. Animal models sensitive to chronic, but not acute, antidepressant treatment are greatly needed for studying antidepressant mechanisms. We initially assessed four inbred mouse strains for their behavioral response to chronic treatment with the selective-serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine (0, 5, 10 mg/kg/day in drinking water), which is used for the treatment of mood and anxiety disorders. Only the highly anxious BALB/c strain exhibited sensitivity to fluoxetine in the forced swim test. Additionally, fluoxetine reduced locomotion in C57BL/6 and 129SvEv, but not BALB/c and DBA/2, strains. We then evaluated the effects of subchronic (∼4 days) and chronic (∼24 days) fluoxetine treatment (0, 10, 18, 25 mg/kg/day) on measures of anxiety and depression in BALB/c mice. Anxiety measures were obtained using the open field and novelty-induced hypophagia tests. Antidepressant effects were evaluated using the forced swim test. We found 18 mg/kg/day of chronic fluoxetine to be active in all three paradigms; subchronic treatment had no effect. Anxiety-related measures were reduced by 18 mg/kg/day. In the forced swim test, 10 and 18 mg/kg/day increased swimming and reduced immobility. Here we present several novel effects of chronic, but not subchronic, antidepressant treatment.
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INTRODUCTION
Animal models sensitive to chronic, but not acute, antidepressant activity are much sought after tools that have remained elusive. While acute antidepressant treatment increases synaptic monoamines within minutes to hours, weeks of sustained treatment are required for induction of therapeutic effects (Blier, 2003). These long-term effects are thought to involve increases in neural plasticity and growth-related events (D’Sa and Duman, 2002). Although some acute paradigms, such as the forced swim and tail suspension tests, provide good assay models for screening antidepressant compounds, few models have been developed in which chronic, but not acute, antidepressant treatment alters behavior (Borsini et al, 2002; Cryan et al, 2002a). Of those, none have strong predictive validity and high reliability while maintaining ease of use (Bourin et al, 2001; Cryan et al, 2002a).
Depression and anxiety disorders are burdensome conditions with lifetime prevalence rates of approximately 7–20% (Hirschfeld and Weisssman, 2002) and 11–27% (Merikangas and Pine, 2002), respectively. For medical disorders of unknown pathophysiology or genetic etiology, such as anxiety and affective disorders, the emerging approach to developing an animal model is to model a single symptom or endophenotype of the disorder, rather than the entire syndrome. The behavioral measures should satisfy the criteria of being robust, reliable, and having strong predictive validity to be initially used as a new model (Geyer and Markou, 1995, 2002). Virtually all categories of anxiety and depressive disorders are responsive to treatment with selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Due to the broad therapeutic potential of this class of antidepressant, we used the prototypical SSRI fluoxetine (Prozac™) to develop animal models of chronic, but not acute, antidepressant treatment.
In the present experiments, we assessed the effects of chronic (∼24 days) and subchronic (∼4 days) fluoxetine treatment on measures of anxiety and depression. To assess anxiety, we used two paradigms: the open field and the novelty-induced hypophagia tests. The open field test is a classical approach/avoidance paradigm in which the novel environment concurrently evokes both anxiety and exploration (Welker, 1957; Belzung and Le Pape, 1994; Dulawa et al, 1999; Prut and Belzung, 2003). An increase in activity or time spent in the center of the open field indicates reductions in anxiety and/or increases in exploration (Dulawa et al, 1999). We also developed a paradigm called ‘novelty-induced hypophagia’, which is a modified version of previous hyponeophagia paradigms. These paradigms use the reduction in feeding that is observed when a rodent is exposed to a novel environment as an anxiety measure (Shephard and Broadhurst, 1982; Bodnoff et al, 1988). To evaluate antidepressant effects, we used the forced swim test. The forced swim test is highly reliable and has strong predictive validity for antidepressant compounds (Porsolt et al, 1977; Cryan et al, 2002a).
We hypothesized that highly emotional mouse strains, such as the BALB/c and DBA/2, might exhibit sensitivity to chronic fluoxetine treatment. Our hypothesis was based on reports that antidepressants can have profound mood-altering effects in depressed or anxious patients, but have few effects in healthy individuals (Barr et al, 1997; Gelfin et al, 1998; Geyer and Markou, 2002). The BALB/c strain has been shown to be highly emotional, or anxious, relative to other strains in many classical approach/avoidance paradigms including the open field test (Kim et al, 2002), the light/dark test (Griebel et al, 2000; Bouwknecht and Paylor, 2002), free-exploration tests (Kopp et al, 1999; Tang et al, 2002), and the novel object test (Tang et al, 2002). BALB/c mice are also comparatively anxious when evaluated for ethological measures, such as stretch-attend postures and defecation in a novel environment (Kim et al, 2002; Yilmazer-Hanke et al, 2003). The DBA2J strain is also highly anxious in a number of paradigms, including the plus maze (Yilmazer-Hanke et al, 2003) and hole-board tests (Ohl et al, 2003).
We first assessed the effects of chronic fluoxetine (0, 5, 10 mg/kg/day) treatment in anxious (BALB/c and DBA/2) vs non-anxious (C57BL/6 and 129SvEv) mouse strains in the open field and forced swim tests. The C57BL/6 and 129SvEv strains were selected for their high frequency of use as well as their non-anxious phenotypes (Kopp et al, 1999; Kim et al, 2002; Tang et al, 2002; Ohl et al, 2003). As only the BALB/c strain was responsive to chronic fluoxetine treatment in the strain comparison study, we then evaluated the effects of both subchronic (∼4 days) and chronic (∼24 days) fluoxetine (0, 10, 18, 25 mg/kg/day) treatment in BALB/c mice. We assessed the effects of chronic and subchronic fluoxetine treatment in the open field test, forced swim test, and the novelty-induced hypophagia test.
METHODS
Subjects
Adult male mice of four strains: BALB/cJ, DBA/2J, C57BL/6J (Jackson Laboratories, Bar Harbor, ME), and 129S6/SvEvTac (Taconic Farms, Germantown, NY) were subjects. For the strain comparison study, mice were 3.5–4 months old and weighed 25–35 g. For subchronic and chronic studies using the BALB/c strain, mice were approximately 2 to 3 months old and weighed 25–30 g. Mice were maintained on a 12 L : 12 D schedule (lights on at 0600) and were housed in groups of five with same type mice. Food and water were provided ad libitum. Behavioral testing occurred during the light phase between 0600 and 1800. All animal testing was conducted in accord with the NIH laboratory animal care guidelines and with IACUC approval.
Drugs
Fluoxetine was a generous gift from Eli Lilly (Indianapolis, IN), and was delivered ad libitum in the drinking water and changed weekly. For initial strain comparison studies, the average water intake per day for each mouse strain was recorded before the experiment began. As the average daily drinking differed between the strains, separate fluoxetine solutions were prepared so that each strain would consume 0, 5, or 10 mg/kg/day of fluoxetine. For subchronic and chronic studies in BALB/c mice, 0, 10, 18, and 25 mg/kg/day fluoxetine was given, which corresponded to 0, 80, 160, and 240 mg/l. Fluoxetine plasma levels were determined by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection (Suckow et al, 1992) for chronically treated BALB/c mice. Fluoxetine was delivered in opaque bottles to protect from light.
Experiments
For the strain comparison study, 36 male mice of each strain (BALB/c, DBA/2, C57BL/6, 129SvEv), with 12 mice per dose (0, 5, 10 mg/kg/day fluoxetine) were subjects for a total of 144 mice. Mice were tested in the open field and the forced swim test following chronic fluoxetine treatment. Beginning on day 30 or 33 of chronic fluoxetine treatment, mice were tested in the open field for 15 min on 3 consecutive days. This design was used to habituate mice to the open field, so that center measures would predominantly reflect anxiety rather than exploration by day 3 (Dulawa et al, 1999). Mice were then tested in the forced swim test on day 36 or 37.
For chronic fluoxetine studies in BALB/c mice, 60 male BALB/c mice with 15 per dose (0, 10, 18, 25 mg/kg/day fluoxetine) were tested in the open field, the forced swim test, and the novelty-induced hypophagia test. Mice were tested first in the open field for 30 min on days 19 or 20 of chronic fluoxetine treatment. Mice were then pretested and tested in the forced swim test on days 21 and 22, respectively. Animals were then allowed to adapt to being singly housed, and were trained to drink sweetened condensed milk for novelty-induced hypophagia testing on days 25–27. Home cage and novel cage testing for the novelty-induced hypophagia test occurred on days 28 and 29, respectively, allowing a week of recovery from the forced swim test. Mice were tested first in the open field because it is the least disruptive of the four tests. Mice were then tested in the forced swim test before the novelty-induced hypophagia test because singly housing mice has been reported to prevent antidepressant effects in the forced swim test (Karolewicz and Paul, 2001).
Studies of subchronic fluoxetine were conducted using separate groups of 60 male BALB/c mice with 15 mice per dose (0, 10, 18, 25 mg/kg/day fluoxetine) to prevent fluoxetine treatment from exceeding 1 week. One group was tested in the open field for 30 min after 1 day of subchronic fluoxetine treatment. The same mice were then pretested and tested in the forced swim test after 6 and 7 days of subchronic fluoxetine treatment, respectively. A second group of 60 BALB/c mice were singly housed and began fluoxetine treatment (day 1). Mice were trained to consume sweetened-condensed milk on days 1–3. They were then tested in the novelty-induced hypophagia test after 4 (home) and 5 (novel) days of subchronic fluoxetine treatment.
Apparatus and Procedures
Open field test
Motor activity was quantified in four Plexiglas open field boxes 43 × 43 cm2 (MED Associates, Georgia, VT). Two sets of 16 pulse-modulated infrared photobeams were placed on opposite walls 2.5-cm apart to record x–y ambulatory movements. Activity chambers were computer interfaced for data sampling at 100-ms resolution. The computer defined grid lines that divided each open field into center and surround regions, with each of four lines being 11 cm from each wall. Dependent measures were the number of entries into the center, the distance traveled in the center, total time spent in the center, and distance traveled in the center divided by total distance traveled. Overall motor activity was quantified as the total distance traveled (cm).
Novelty-induced hypophagia test
Mice were singly housed several days before training began. For 3 consecutive days of training, mice were presented with diluted (1 : 3; milk : water) sweetened condensed milk (Carnation). Milk was presented in 10 ml serological pipettes with sippers attached with parafilm. Pipettes were closed with rubber stoppers and positioned through wire cage lids. Home cage testing occurred on day 4 when mice were briefly removed from their cages to position pipets containing the milk, and testing began when mice were returned to their cages. The latency to drink and the volume consumed were recorded every 5 min for 30 min. Home cage testing occurred under dim lighting (approx. 50 lux). Mice that never drank during the 30 min of home cage testing were eliminated from the experiment. Novel cage testing occurred on day 5, when mice were placed into new clean cages of the same dimensions but without shavings, with pipets containing the milk positioned. Novel cage testing occurred under bright lighting (approx. 1200 lux), with white paper placed under cages to enhance aversiveness. Thus, each mouse was trained to drink milk (days 1–3), tested in its home cage (day 4), and then tested in a novel cage (day 5).
Forced swim test
We used the modified forced swim test procedure, which is more sensitive in detecting the antidepressant activity of SSRIs than the traditional forced swim test. The modifications to the test are increasing the water depth (Detke and Lucki, 1996), and using a time sampling technique to rate the predominant behavior over a 5-s interval (Cryan and Lucki, 2000; Cryan et al, 2002b). Mice were placed into plastic buckets 19 cm in diameter and 23 cm deep filled with 23–25°C water, and videotaped for 6 min. Only the last 4 min were scored for four measures: swimming, immobility, climbing, or other. The predominant behavior was recorded every 5 s. For chronic and subchronic fluoxetine studies in BALB/c mice, mice were pre-exposed to the forced swim test for 6 min 24 h before test day to increase sensitivity for detecting antidepressant behavioral effects (Borsini et al, 1989). We used a 6 min rather than the traditional 15 min pretest length because we were able to observe fluoxetine's antidepressant effects with this shorter pretest duration, and thus avoided further stress to the animals.
Statistical Analysis
Open field test
For Experiment 1, two-factor ANOVAs with fluoxetine as a between-subject factor and day as a within-subject factor were applied to five measures for each strain: time spent in the center, distance traveled in the center, center distance/total distance traveled, entries into the center, and total distance traveled. Subchronic and chronic experiments in BALB/c mice were analyzed using one-way ANOVAs with fluoxetine as a between-subjects factor. As data deviated substantially from a normal distribution due to low activity levels of BALB/c mice, analyses were applied to log transformed data.
When significant differences in locomotor activity were observed in the open field, ANCOVAs were applied to center measures with locomotor activity as a covariate. Remaining significant effects of fluoxetine indicate independence between measures of locomotor activity and center measures.
Novelty-induced hypophagia test
For latency scores, a maximum cutoff of 600 s was used. Two-factor ANOVAs with home/novel cage condition as a within-subjects factor and fluoxetine as a between-subjects factor were applied to latency values. Mice having latency difference scores (novel minus home) that were greater or less than two standard deviations from the mean were eliminated from analysis for all measures of the novelty-induced hypophagia test. For consumption data, a three-factor ANOVA with block (5 min intervals) and home/novel cage condition as within-subjects factors and fluoxetine as a between-subjects factor was used to assess whether the novel cage was sufficiently anxiogenic to reduce consumption. Two-factor ANOVAs with block as a within-subjects factor and fluoxetine as a between-subjects factor were applied separately to consumption values for the home and the novel cage.
Forced swim test
Two-factor ANOVAs with fluoxetine as a between-subjects factor and block (1 min intervals) as a within-subject factor were applied to three different measures: swimming, immobility, and climbing. When significant differences in swimming were observed, ANCOVAs were applied to the effects of fluoxetine on swimming with locomotor activity values from the open field test as a covariate. Remaining significant effects of fluoxetine indicate independence between measures of locomotor activity and swimming.
For all tests, significant main effects or interactions were resolved using post hoc ANOVAs with adjusted P-values and/or Newman-Keuls post hoc tests. Significance was set at P<0.05.
RESULTS
Strain Comparison Studies
Open field test
Four strains of mice, BALB/c, DBA/2, C57BL/6, and 129SvEv, were tested on 3 consecutive days in the open field to assess locomotion and anxiety measures. ANOVAs revealed that BALB/c mice showed no changes in locomotor activity, while C57BL/6 and 129SvEv mice showed reductions in locomotor activity, and DBA/2 mice showed a trend towards increased locomotor activity in response to chronic fluoxetine treatment (Figure 1). The 10 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine reduced locomotor activity in 129SvEv mice relative to both other doses on day 1, and relative to the 5 mg/kg/day dose on day 3. The 10 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine reduced locomotor activity overall in C57BL mice (F(2,33)=3.30, P=0.05) relative to controls. DBA/2 mice showed a trend (F(4,62)=2.40, P=0.06) for the 10 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine to increase locomotion relative to controls on day 3.
None of the four strains exhibited increases in center entries, time in the center, distance traveled in the center, or center/total distance traveled in response to chronic fluoxetine treatment (data not shown). In fact, chronic fluoxetine reduced center measures in C57BL/6 and 129SvEv mice, and produced no changes in BALB/c and DBA/2 mice. Both doses of fluoxetine (5 and 10 mg/kg/day) reduced time in the center relative to control in 129SvEv mice (F(2,29)=4.90, P<0.01). Additionally, both doses of fluoxetine reduced the distance traveled in the center (F(4,58)=3.11, P<0.05) and center entries (F(4,58)=4.08, P<0.01) relative to controls on day 1 in 129SvEv mice. C57BL/6 mice also showed an overall reduction in the number of entries into the center (F(2,33)=8.00, P<0.01) for both doses of fluoxetine relative to control. The decrease in center measures exhibited by C57BL/6 and 129SvEv mice in response to drug was likely related to decreased locomotor activity. Indeed, ANCOVAs revealed that drug no longer had a significant effect on center measures when data were analyzed using locomotor activity as a covariate. Furthermore, no effects of chronic fluoxetine on center/total distance traveled were found in any strain.
Forced swim test
The BALB/c was the only strain showing sensitivity to chronic treatment with fluoxetine (Figure 2). BALB/c mice treated with the 10 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine showed increased swimming (F(2,33)=4.37, P<0.05) and decreased immobility (F(2,33)=3.52, P<0.05) relative to the 5 mg/kg/day dose and controls. No interactions of drug and time block were found for any measure. ANCOVA indicated that fluoxetine's effects on swimming remained significant when locomotor activity values from the open field test were used as a covariate (F(2,138)=5.96, P<0.01). No effects of fluoxetine on climbing were observed.
Chronic vs Subchronic Effects of Fluoxetine in BALB/C Mice
Serum fluoxetine levels
Serum fluoxetine levels were assessed in BALB/c mice receiving chronic fluoxetine treatment (0, 10, 18, and 25 mg/kg/day) (Figure 3). Fluoxetine exhibited nonlinear kinetics, indicated by a disproportionate increase in its blood concentrations with increasing doses. Serum levels for norfluoxetine (ng/ml) were 205.3±53.8, 495.4±99.0, and 1132±98.1 for the 10, 18, and 25 mg/kg/day doses, respectively.
Open field test
BALB/c mice treated chronically with fluoxetine were tested in the open field for 30 min. As in the strain comparison study, fluoxetine did not alter total locomotor activity in BALB/c mice (F(3,56)=1.36, P=0.27). However, for the log of center entries (F(3,56)=6.85, P<0.001), the log of center distance (F(3,56)=2.89, P<0.05), and the log of center distance/log total distance traveled (F(3,56)=2.69, P=0.05), mice treated with 18 mg/kg/day fluoxetine exhibited significantly higher values than controls (Figure 4). For the log of center entries, mice treated with 10 mg/kg/day fluoxetine also exhibited lower values than groups receiving 18 and 25 mg/kg/day. Although the same trend was observed, there was no significant effect of drug on log of time in the center. Even without logarithmic transformation, mice treated with 18 mg/kg/day fluoxetine made more center entries (F(3,56)=3.07, P<0.05) and showed a trend for higher center/total distance values (F(3,56)=2.51, P=0.07) than controls, while total locomotor activity remain unaffected by all doses of drug (F(3,56)=0.86, P=0.47).
BALB/c mice treated subchronically (one day) with fluoxetine showed no differences in any measures in the open field, whether data were analyzed untransformed, or following logarithmic transformation (Table 1).
Novelty-induced hypophagia
Mice were assessed for the latency to consume and the amount consumed of a familiar and palatable snack in the home cage and a novel cage. The latency of one mouse was not recorded, and three (of 60 total) mice never drank in the home cage. Chronic fluoxetine treatment reduced the latency to drink milk in the novel, but not the home cage (F(3,48)=3.87, P<0.01) (Figure 5a). In the novel cage, all three doses of fluoxetine reduced the latency to drink relative to control in a dose-related manner. For latency difference scores (novel minus home), control animals exhibited significantly larger difference scores than animals receiving 18 and 25 mg/kg/day fluoxetine (Figure 5a). Four animals of 56 total with latency difference scores greater or less than two standard deviations from the mean were eliminated from analysis for the novelty-induced hypophagia test.
Chronic fluoxetine treatment also attenuated another anxiety-related measure as assessed by consumption in the novel environment. Milk consumption was reduced overall in the novel environment compared to the home environment during the first 5 min (F(1,103)=11.86, P<0.001). Additionally, both the 18 and 25 mg/kg/day doses of fluoxetine increased milk consumption compared to the 0 and 10 mg/kg/day doses in the first block (F(15,240)=2.10, P<0.01) in the novel cage (Figure 5b). In the home cage, the 25 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine increased milk consumption compared to control in the first block (F(15,245)=2.29, P<0.01).
Subchronic (4–5 days) treatment with fluoxetine had no effect on any measure of latency. The overall latency to drink was increased in the novel cage (F(1,47)=4.33, P<0.05), suggesting that the novel cage was anxiogenic. Similarly, milk consumption was reduced in the novel environment compared to the home condition during the first 5 min (F(1,99)=9.62, P<0.01). There was no effect of subchronic fluoxetine treatment on milk consumption. While ANOVA found a main effect of fluoxetine on consumption in the home cage (F(3,47)=3.57, P<0.05), post hoc tests found only a trend for the 25 mg/kg/day dose to increase consumption relative to control (Table 1).
Forced swim test
In the forced swim test, SSRIs decrease immobility and increase swimming, while catecholaminergic agents decrease immobility and increase climbing in rats (Cryan and Lucki, 2000; Cryan et al, 2002a, 2002b). On test day, BALB/c mice treated chronically with 10 and 18 mg/kg/day fluoxetine showed increases in swimming compared to mice treated with 0 and 25 mg/kg/day of fluoxetine (F(3,56)=3.20, P<0.05) (Figure 6a). ANCOVA indicated that fluoxetine's effects on swimming remained significant when locomotor activity values from the open field test were used as a covariate (F(3,232)=3.70, P<0.05). Although ANOVA indicated that chronic fluoxetine treatment did not significantly reduce immobility, planned comparisons revealed that the 10 mg/kg/day (F(1,118)=3.81, P=0.05) and 18 mg/kg/day (F(1,118)=4.90, P<0.05) doses significantly reduced immobility relative to control (Figure 6b). Mice treated with 25 mg/kg/day of chronic fluoxetine also showed a trend for increased climbing relative to all other doses (F(3,56)=2.56, P=0.06) (Figure 6c). No interactions of drug and time block were found for any measure.
Subchronic (7 days) treatment with fluoxetine had no effect on swimming or immobility (Table 1). The only effect was an increase in climbing induced by the 18 mg/kg/day dose relative to the 0 dose (F(3,56)=3.34, P<0.05). Although catecholaminergic, but not serotonergic, agents are thought to increase climbing behavior, this hypothesis is based on results from acute, but not chronic drug studies (Cryan and Lucki, 2000; Cryan et al, 2002a, 2002b). No interactions of drug and time block were found.
DISCUSSION
Here we show three novel effects of chronic, but not subchronic, fluoxetine treatment on mouse behavior. In the highly emotional BALB/c strain, chronic fluoxetine treatment (∼24 days) increased center measures in the open field. In the novelty-induced hypophagia test, chronic fluoxetine treatment reduced the latency and increased the consumption of a palatable meal in a novel environment. In the forced swim test, chronic fluoxetine treatment increased swimming and reduced immobility. No effects of subchronic fluoxetine treatment (∼4 days) were observed (Table 1), suggesting that these models are specifically responsive to the chronic administration of fluoxetine.
The serum fluoxetine levels of chronically treated BALB/c mice were consistent with reports that fluoxetine exhibits nonlinear kinetics, as indicated by a disproportionate increase in its blood concentrations after dose escalation (Caccia et al, 1990; Hiemke and Hartter, 2000) (Figure 3). Serum fluoxetine levels for the 10 mg/kg/day dose (170.3±57.8 ng/ml) were toward the bottom of the range of plasma levels found in patients taking 20–80 mg/day Prozac (100–700 ng/ml) (Koran et al, 1996). Serum levels for the 18 mg/kg/day dose (563.4±118.4 ng/ml) were toward the high end of this range. However, the 25 mg/kg/day dose of fluoxetine resulted in serum levels (1779.2±364.9 ng/ml) that were over twice the maximum of the human range. The ratio of plasma fluoxetine to norfluoxetine observed here is similar to that reported for humans (Koran et al, 1996). We have previously shown that steady state for both fluoxetine and norfluoxetine is achieved by 5 days of receiving fluoxetine in the drinking water (10 mg/kg/day), as serum levels after 5 or 90 days of treatment are equivalent (Santarelli et al, 2003).
Identification of the BALB/c strain as sensitive to chronic fluoxetine was critical for the development of the mouse models presented here. Our finding that the highly anxious BALB/c strain is sensitive to chronic fluoxetine treatment is consistent with reports that in humans, antidepressants can have profound mood-altering effects in depressed or anxious patients, but have few effects in healthy individuals (Barr et al, 1997; Gelfin et al, 1998; Geyer and Markou, 2002). It also suggests that the frequent use of mouse strains that are not anxious, such as the C57BL/6, may contribute to the widespread difficulties in developing chronic antidepressant models. Inducing deficits in animals that are central features or symptoms of anxiety or depressive disorders may be essential for establishing models of antidepressant activity. For example, desipramine and low dose fluoxetine do not alter intracranial self-stimulation reward thresholds unless animals have undergone drug withdrawal (Kokkinidis et al, 1980; Markou et al, 1992; Barr et al, 2002) or chronic stress (Moreau et al, 1992). The use of a highly anxious strain, such as the BALB/c, for models of antidepressant activity offers unique advantages. Using an anxious strain avoids the time, effort, and potential variability of chronic stress paradigms, and offers a more unbiased approach for identifying novel therapeutic targets than models based on pharmacological perturbations (Thompson et al, 2003). Furthermore, using the BALB/c strain as a background for mutant mouse lines will allow the investigation of a role for the mutated genes in antidepressant action.
The strain comparison of the effects of chronic fluoxetine in the open field revealed that 129SvEv and C57BL/6 mice showed reduced locomotor activity to 10 mg/kg/day of fluoxetine. This reduction in locomotor activity could potentially confound other behavioral measures attempting to assess anti-anxiety or antidepressant effects of chronic fluoxetine. Thus, these two commonly used strains may be undesirable for studying the effects of chronic fluoxetine treatment. The BALB/c strain, however, exhibited no sedative effect. We do not believe that the lack of a sedative effect in the BALB/c strain is due to a floor effect, because the higher doses of fluoxetine appear to modestly increase locomotor activity in both experiments (nonsignificant) (Figures 2 and 4). The BALB/c was the only strain to respond to chronic fluoxetine in the forced swim test (Figure 2). The lack of effect of chronic fluoxetine treatment on locomotor activity together with the increase in swimming and decrease in immobility observed in the forced swim test indicated that the BALB/c strain was the most suitable strain for assessing the effects of chronic fluoxetine. It should be noted that these strain differences may result from pharmacokinetic differences, and that one or more strains may respond to doses of fluoxetine not tested here.
Anxiety measures of the open field test have been suggested to be insensitive to antidepressant treatment by a substantial literature (Prut and Belzung, 2003). Here, we observed that BALB/c mice receiving chronic, but not subchronic, fluoxetine showed increases in center entries, distance traveled in the center, and center/total distance traveled at the 18 mg/kg/day dose, with no change in overall locomotor activity. These findings strongly suggest that 18 mg/kg/day of chronic fluoxetine decreases anxiety and/or increases exploration (Dulawa et al, 1999) in BALB/c mice. Although a large number of studies have found no effect of antidepressants in the open field (Prut and Belzung, 2003), few have evaluated the effects of chronic treatment in anxious animals. To our knowledge, the effects of chronic antidepressant treatment on open field measures in BALB/c mice have not been previously reported.
The forced swim test has strong predictive validity, high reliability, and is easy to use (Porsolt et al, 1977; Cryan et al, 2002a). However, acute antidepressant-like effects in the forced swim test are likely to reflect the initial events elicited by antidepressants rather than the progressive changes that are likely to accompany chronic antidepressant treatment. Studies comparing the acute and chronic effects of SSRIs in the forced swim test have reported comparable behavioral effects at the two timepoints both in rats (Reneric et al, 2002; Kelliher et al, 2003) and in mice (Conti et al, 2002). In addition, C57BL/6 mice have been shown to be sensitive to chronic treatment with tricyclic antidepressants in the forced swim test, although acute or subchronic timepoints were not evaluated (Alcaro et al, 2002). Only one report has found antidepressant effects of chronic, but not acute, low dose fluoxetine or desipramine treatment in rats (Detke et al, 1997). Furthermore, the dual 5-HT/NA reuptake inhibitor milnacipran has been shown to increase climbing when given subchronically, and increase both climbing and swimming when given chronically in rats (Reneric et al, 2002). Here, we observed that while subchronic fluoxetine had no effect, chronic treatment with 10 and 18 mg/kg/day fluoxetine increased swimming and reduced immobility in both experiments in BALB/c mice (Figures 1 and 6). ANCOVA showed that the nonsignificant increases in locomotion induced by fluoxetine found in the open field (Figures 2 and 4) were not responsible for the increases in swimming in either experiment. A trend for an increase in climbing induced by chronic treatment with 25 mg/kg/day fluoxetine may have resulted from a loss of specificity for the serotonergic system of this high dose (Figure 3). Previous reports have shown that acute injection of 10 mg/kg fluoxetine reduces immobility in BALB/c mice (Lucki et al, 2001). The present lack of effect of subchronic fluoxetine treatment should not have resulted from lower plasma fluoxetine levels compared to chronically treated mice, since we have previously found steady-state blood levels to be achieved by day 5 with administration of fluoxetine in the drinking water (Santarelli et al, 2003). Rather, the sensitivity of BALB/c mice to acute 10 mg/kg fluoxetine treatment (Lucki et al, 2001) likely results from the sharp peak levels of drug produced by injection. We administered fluoxetine in the drinking water to avoid the stress to animals and the sharp peak drug levels produced by daily injection.
BALB/c mice exhibited sensitivity to chronic, but not subchronic, treatment with fluoxetine treatment in the novelty-induced hypophagia test. The novel cage was anxiety-provoking, as the latency to drink was increased and the first 5 min of milk consumption was decreased relative to behavior in the home cage. In the novel cage, all three doses reduced the latency to consume milk relative to control. Additionally, the 18 and 25 mg/kg/day doses decreased difference scores for latency (home vs novel) relative to control, and increased the first 5 min of milk consumption in the novel environment. Although the 25 mg/kg/day dose also increased consumption in the first 5 min in the home cage, this dose resulted in serum levels that are over twice the maximum levels found in patients taking 20–80 mg/day Prozac™ (Koran et al, 1996). The novelty-induced hypophagia paradigm might also assess fluoxetine's effects on hedonic processes in addition to anxiety. The intake of palatable fluids, including sucrose and saccharin solutions, has been used as a measure of reward sensitivity (Willner, 1997; Le Pen et al, 2002). In such paradigms, reduced drinking is thought to reflect anhedonia, a core symptom of depression in the current diagnostic system, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (American Psychiatric Association, 1994). Due to the high palatability of sweetened-condensed milk, the novelty-induced hypophagia paradigm might assess anhedonia in addition to anxiety.
The novelty-induced hypophagia paradigm offers advantages over existing hyponeophagia-based models. Although current models use extensive food deprivations (24 h for mice) to induce feeding behavior (Shephard and Broadhurst, 1982; Bodnoff et al, 1988; Bilkei-Gorzo et al, 2002; Santarelli et al, 2003), we have found that these deprivation periods can induce variable hunger levels as assessed by latency in identical batches of mice (data not shown). In the present work and that of Merali et al (2003), the use of a familiar and highly palatable snack makes food deprivations unnecessary. Additionally, the present use of a novel cage (Merali et al, 2003) rather than an open field (Bodnoff et al, 1988; Bilkei-Gorzo et al, 2002; Santarelli et al, 2003) works equally well while conserving space, and may minimize any potentially confounding locomotor effects. Finally, both latency and consumption measures are applied in both the home and novel conditions in the novelty-induced hypophagia test, while other paradigms assess only latency (Bodnoff et al, 1988; Bilkei-Gorzo et al, 2002; Merali et al, 2003), or latency in the novel cage and consumption in the home cage (Santarelli et al, 2003). The exclusive use of latency scores has several drawbacks in hyponeophagia-based paradigms. Aside from not exhibiting normal distributions, latency values in the home condition are invariably very small compared to those in the novel condition. Thus, while home cage latency scores are used to control for potential effects of drug treatments on hunger or food preferences, floor effects may often preclude this control. On the other hand, consumption scores are not vulnerable to floor effects (Figure 5). Ideally, both latency and consumption scores should be assessed in the home and novel conditions.
Our findings introduce three novel effects of chronic, but not subchronic, antidepressant treatment in the anxious BALB/c strain. These models are easy to use, and appear reliable. Animal models exhibiting sensitivity to antidepressant compounds and the time course of their effects represent powerful tools for mechanistic studies into the antidepressant response. Studies are currently underway to further pharmacologically validate these models.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R01 DA09862), the National Institute of Mental Health (R01 MH068542-1), (P50 MH50733), and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD). SC Dulawa was supported by an individual postdoctoral National Research Service Award (F32-MH65791-01A1).
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Dulawa, S., Holick, K., Gundersen, B. et al. Effects of Chronic Fluoxetine in Animal Models of Anxiety and Depression. Neuropsychopharmacol 29, 1321–1330 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.npp.1300433
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.npp.1300433
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