Autoshaping conditioned responses (CRs) are reflexive and targeted motor responses expressed as a result of experience with reward. To evaluate the hypothesis that autoshaping may be a form of impulsive responding, within-subjects correlations between performance on autoshaping and impulsivity tasks were assessed in 15 Long-Evans hooded rats. Autoshaping procedures [insertion of retractable lever conditioned stimulus (CS) followed by the response-independent delivery of food (US)] were followed by testing for impulsive-like responding in a two-choice lever-press operant delay-of-reward procedure (immediate small food reward versus delayed large food reward). Delay-of-reward functions revealed two distinct subject populations. Subjects in the Sensitive group (n=7) were more impulsive-like, increasing immediate reward choices at longer delays for large reward, while those in the Insensitive group (n=8) responded predominantly on only one lever. During the prior autoshaping phase, the Sensitive group had performed more autoshaping CRs, and correlations revealed that impulsive subjects acquired the autoshaping CR in fewer trials. In the Sensitive group, acute injections of ethanol (0, 0.25, 0.50, 1.00, 1.50 g/kg) given immediately before delay-of-reward sessions yielded an inverted U-shaped dose-response curve with increased impulsivity induced by the 0.25, 0.50, and 1.00 g/kg doses of ethanol, while choice strategy of the Insensitive group was not influenced by ethanol dose. Ethanol induced impulsive-like responding only in rats that were flexible in their response strategy (Sensitive group), and this group also performed more autoshaping CRs. Data support the hypothesis that autoshaping and impulsivity are linked.
Treatment with different antidepressants is invariably accompanied by the down-regulation of the 5-hydroxytryptamine2A (5-HT2A) receptor. To determine whether receptor down-regulation is an essential part of antidepressant action, we manipulated levels of the 5-HT2A receptor by using a nonpharmacological approach. Here, we report that down-regulation of the 5-HT2A receptor by intracerebroventricular injection of antisense oligonucleotides resulted in an antidepressant-like effect in mice. Animals with 5-HT2A receptor deficiency showed less immobility in the Porsolt's forced swim test, a well established animal model that is used to identify drugs with an antidepressant effect. The overall locomotor activity of the receptor-deficient animals was not altered, demonstrating the specificity of the behavioral change in the Porsolt's forced swim test. Reduced immobility in this test was accompanied by a greater c-Fos response in piriform cortex. Because 5-HT2A receptors have been localized on gamma-aminobutyric acid interneurons, the inhibitory activity of these neurons may be impaired at low receptor levels, leading to a greater c-Fos response in the piriform cortex and increased mobility in the Porsolt's forced swim test. These experiments demonstrate that down-regulation of the 5-HT2A receptor alone is sufficient to achieve an antidepressant-like effect in mice and suggest that receptor down-regulation may be an essential part of the antidepressant drug action.
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