An automated group-housed oral fentanyl self-administration method in mice.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Psychopharmacology Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-22 DOI:10.1007/s00213-024-06528-6
Noa Peretz-Rivlin, Idit Marsh-Yvgi, Yonatan Fatal, Anna Terem, Hagit Turm, Yavin Shaham, Ami Citri
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Rationale and objectives: Social factors play a critical role in human drug addiction, and humans often consume drugs together with their peers. In contrast, in traditional animal models of addiction, rodents consume or self-administer the drug in their homecage or operant self-administration chambers while isolated from their peers. Here, we describe HOMECAGE ("Home-cage Observation and Measurement for Experimental Control and Analysis in a Group-housed Environment"), a translationally relevant method for studying oral opioid self-administration in mice. This setting reduces experimental confounds introduced by social isolation or interaction with the experimenter.

Methods: We have developed HOMECAGE, a method in which mice are group-housed and individually monitored for their consumption of a drug vs. a reference liquid.

Results: Mice in HOMECAGE preserve naturalistic aspects of behavior, including social interactions and circadian activity. The mice showed a preference for fentanyl and escalated their fentanyl intake over time. Mice preferred to consume fentanyl in bouts during the dark cycle. Mice entrained to the reinforcement schedule of the task, optimizing their pokes to obtain fentanyl rewards, and maintained responding for fentanyl under a progressive ratio schedule. HOMECAGE also enabled the detection of cage-specific and individual-specific behavior patterns and allowed the identification of differences in fentanyl consumption between co-housed control and experimental mice.

Conclusions: HOMECAGE serves as a valuable procedure for translationally relevant studies on oral opioid intake under conditions that more closely mimic the human condition. The method enables naturalistic investigation of factors contributing to opioid addiction-related behaviors and can be used to identify novel treatments.

Abstract Image

小鼠自动分组口服芬太尼自我给药方法。
理由和目标:社会因素在人类吸毒成瘾中起着至关重要的作用,人类经常与同伴一起吸食毒品。相反,在传统的成瘾动物模型中,啮齿类动物是在与同伴隔离的家庭笼或操作性自我给药室中吸食或自我给药的。在此,我们将介绍 HOMECAGE("在群居环境中进行实验控制和分析的家庭笼观察和测量"),这是一种用于研究小鼠口服阿片类药物自我给药的可转化方法。这种环境可减少因社会隔离或与实验者的互动而带来的实验混淆:我们开发了 "HOMECAGE",在这种方法中,小鼠被分组饲养,并单独监测它们对药物和参考液体的消耗:HOMECAGE中的小鼠保留了行为的自然性,包括社会交往和昼夜节律活动。小鼠表现出对芬太尼的偏好,并且随着时间的推移其芬太尼摄入量会增加。小鼠更喜欢在黑暗周期中分批摄入芬太尼。小鼠适应了任务的强化时间表,通过优化戳刺来获得芬太尼奖励,并在渐进比率时间表下保持对芬太尼的反应。HOMECAGE还能检测笼子特定行为模式和个体特定行为模式,并能识别同舍对照组小鼠和实验组小鼠在芬太尼消耗量上的差异:HOMECAGE是在更接近人类的条件下进行口服阿片类药物摄入量转化相关研究的重要程序。该方法能够对导致阿片类药物成瘾相关行为的因素进行自然调查,并可用于确定新的治疗方法。
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来源期刊
Psychopharmacology
Psychopharmacology 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
5.90%
发文量
257
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Official Journal of the European Behavioural Pharmacology Society (EBPS) Psychopharmacology is an international journal that covers the broad topic of elucidating mechanisms by which drugs affect behavior. The scope of the journal encompasses the following fields: Human Psychopharmacology: Experimental This section includes manuscripts describing the effects of drugs on mood, behavior, cognition and physiology in humans. The journal encourages submissions that involve brain imaging, genetics, neuroendocrinology, and developmental topics. Usually manuscripts in this section describe studies conducted under controlled conditions, but occasionally descriptive or observational studies are also considered. Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Translational This section comprises studies addressing the broad intersection of drugs and psychiatric illness. This includes not only clinical trials and studies of drug usage and metabolism, drug surveillance, and pharmacoepidemiology, but also work utilizing the entire range of clinically relevant methodologies, including neuroimaging, pharmacogenetics, cognitive science, biomarkers, and others. Work directed toward the translation of preclinical to clinical knowledge is especially encouraged. The key feature of submissions to this section is that they involve a focus on clinical aspects. Preclinical psychopharmacology: Behavioral and Neural This section considers reports on the effects of compounds with defined chemical structures on any aspect of behavior, in particular when correlated with neurochemical effects, in species other than humans. Manuscripts containing neuroscientific techniques in combination with behavior are welcome. We encourage reports of studies that provide insight into the mechanisms of drug action, at the behavioral and molecular levels. Preclinical Psychopharmacology: Translational This section considers manuscripts that enhance the confidence in a central mechanism that could be of therapeutic value for psychiatric or neurological patients, using disease-relevant preclinical models and tests, or that report on preclinical manipulations and challenges that have the potential to be translated to the clinic. Studies aiming at the refinement of preclinical models based upon clinical findings (back-translation) will also be considered. The journal particularly encourages submissions that integrate measures of target tissue exposure, activity on the molecular target and/or modulation of the targeted biochemical pathways. Preclinical Psychopharmacology: Molecular, Genetic and Epigenetic This section focuses on the molecular and cellular actions of neuropharmacological agents / drugs, and the identification / validation of drug targets affecting the CNS in health and disease. We particularly encourage studies that provide insight into the mechanisms of drug action at the molecular level. Manuscripts containing evidence for genetic or epigenetic effects on neurochemistry or behavior are welcome.
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