Wisket rat model of schizophrenia: Impaired motivation and, altered brain structure, but no anhedonia

•Hedonic behavior and brain structure were studied in a three-hit schizophrenia model.•Schizophrenia-like Wisket rats have cognitive dysfunction without anhedonia.•Anhedonic behavior is not involved in the impaired motivation of Wisket rats.•Wisket rats have similar structural changes in the brain a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysiology & behavior Vol. 244; p. 113651
Main Authors Büki, Alexandra, Bohár, Zsuzsanna, Kekesi, Gabriella, Vécsei, László, Horvath, Gyongyi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.02.2022
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Summary:•Hedonic behavior and brain structure were studied in a three-hit schizophrenia model.•Schizophrenia-like Wisket rats have cognitive dysfunction without anhedonia.•Anhedonic behavior is not involved in the impaired motivation of Wisket rats.•Wisket rats have similar structural changes in the brain as in schizophrenia. It is well-known that the poor cognition in schizophrenia is strongly linked to negative symptoms, including motivational deficit, which due to, at least partially, anhedonia. The goal of this study was to explore whether the schizophrenia-like Wisket animals with impaired motivation (obtained in the reward-based hole-board test), also show decreased hedonic behavior (investigated with the sucrose preference test). While neurochemical alterations of different neurotransmitter systems have been detected in the Wisket rats, no research has been performed on structural changes. Therefore, our additional aim was to reveal potential neuroanatomical and structural alterations in different brain regions in these rats. The rats showed decreased general motor activity (locomotion, rearing and exploration) and impaired task performance in the hole-board test compared to the controls, whereas no significant difference was observed in the sucrose preference test between the groups. The Wisket rats exhibited a significant decrease in the frontal cortical thickness and the hippocampal area, and moderate increases in the lateral ventricles and cell disarray in the CA3 subfield of hippocampus. To our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the hedonic behavior and neuroanatomical alterations in a multi-hit animal model of schizophrenia. The results obtained in the sucrose preference test suggest that anhedonic behavior might not be involved in the impaired motivation obtained in the hole-board test. The neuropathological changes agree with findings obtained in patients with schizophrenia, which refine the high face validity of the Wisket model.
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ISSN:0031-9384
1873-507X
DOI:10.1016/j.physbeh.2021.113651