Animal models for the evaluation of antipsychotic agents.

Fundam Clin Pharmacol

Department of Pharmacology, SRM Medical College Hospital and Research Centre, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, SRM nagar, Kanchipuram, Chennai, India.

Published: June 2023

Schizophrenia, the most serious among psychoses, has negative symptoms such as anhedonia, avolition and apathy, and cognitive defects in addition to positive symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions characterising all psychotic disorders. Traditional antipsychotics had dopamine D receptor antagonism as their principal mechanism of action, with disabling extrapyramidal symptoms as corollary. Newer atypical agents with diverse receptor actions introduced to circumvent this issue, nevertheless, had varied side effects such as agranulocytosis, insulin resistance, seizures, and cardiac events. Also, symptoms in cognitive and negative domains do not respond well even to newer agents creating an unmet need. Designing a valid animal model with translational relevance for a complex disease such as schizophrenia is a tedious process. Induction or suppression of certain animal behaviours by test compounds (behavioural models) and antagonising effects induced by compounds with psychotic potential (pharmacological models) are the conventional models used. One among the major disadvantages with conventional models is that these paradigms are induced acutely and relate to aberration of a single neurotransmitter system, which is in sharp contrast to the chronic nature and interplay of multiple neurotransmitter systems in psychotic diseases. However, with progress in elucidation of disease mechanisms, novel models are generated utilising developmental, genetic, and environmental factors (neurodevelopmental models) to effectively reflect the human disease pathogenesis and clinical manifestations, but with paucity of studies assessing the impact of drugs on them. This review presents an overview of schizophrenia hypotheses, requisites of a valid animal model, available animal models with their advantages and disadvantages.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/fcp.12855DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

animal models
8
valid animal
8
animal model
8
conventional models
8
models
7
animal
5
models evaluation
4
evaluation antipsychotic
4
antipsychotic agents
4
agents schizophrenia
4

Similar Publications

Background: Although bariatric and metabolic surgical methods, including duodenal-jejunal bypass (DJB), were shown to improve metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) in clinical trials and experimental rodent models, their underlying mechanisms remain unclear. The present study therefore evaluated the therapeutic effects and mechanisms of action of DJB in rats with MASLD.

Methods: Rats with MASLD were randomly assigned to undergo DJB or sham surgery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: We aimed to investigate the role of gallic acid treatment on spinal cord tissues after spinal cord injury (SCI) and its relationship with endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress by histochemical, immunohistochemical, and in-silico techniques.

Methods: Thirty female Wistar albino rats were divided into three groups: sham, SCI, and SCI+gallic acid. SCI was induced by dropping a 15-g weight onto the exposed T10-T11 spinal cord segment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To evaluate intravenous meropenem and intraperitoneal 10% aqueous extract of Schinus terebinthifolius (aroeira) in elderly rats after autogenous fecal peritonitis.

Methods: Thirty 18-month-old Wistar rats underwent peritonitis with 4 mL/kg of autogenous fecal solution. They were stratified into groups: control without treatment; study I, treated with meropenem (40 mg/kg); and study II, treated with meropenem at the same dose and intraperitoneal 10% aqueous extract of aroeira.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The transmission bottleneck, defined as the number of viruses shed from one host to infect another, is an important determinant of the rate of virus evolution and the level of immunity required to protect against virus transmission. Despite its importance, the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission bottleneck remains poorly characterized. We adapted a SARS-CoV-2 reverse genetics system to generate a pool of >200 isogenic SARS-CoV-2 viruses harboring specific 6-nucleotide barcodes, infected donor hamsters with this pool, and exposed contact hamsters to paired infected donors, varying the duration and route of exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Targeting TRPC channels for control of arthritis-induced bone erosion.

Sci Adv

January 2025

Fels Cancer Institute for Personalized Medicine, Department of Cancer & Cellular Biology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19140, USA.

Arthritis leads to bone erosion due to an imbalance between osteoclast and osteoblast function. Our prior investigations revealed that the Ca-selective ion channel, Orai1, is critical for osteoclast maturation. Here, we show that the small-molecule ELP-004 preferentially inhibits transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channels.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!