Ambiguous-Cue Interpretation is Biased Under Stress- and Depression-Like States in Rats

Negative cognitive bias—the tendency to interpret ambiguous situations pessimistically—is a central feature of stress-related disorders such as depression. The underlying neurobiology of this bias, however, remains unclear, not least because of a lack of translational tools. We established a new amb...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychopharmacology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2010-03, Vol.35 (4), p.1008-1015
Hauptverfasser: Enkel, Thomas, Gholizadeh, Donya, von Bohlen und Halbach, Oliver, Sanchis-Segura, Carles, Hurlemann, Rene, Spanagel, Rainer, Gass, Peter, Vollmayr, Barbara
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container_issue 4
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container_title Neuropsychopharmacology (New York, N.Y.)
container_volume 35
creator Enkel, Thomas
Gholizadeh, Donya
von Bohlen und Halbach, Oliver
Sanchis-Segura, Carles
Hurlemann, Rene
Spanagel, Rainer
Gass, Peter
Vollmayr, Barbara
description Negative cognitive bias—the tendency to interpret ambiguous situations pessimistically—is a central feature of stress-related disorders such as depression. The underlying neurobiology of this bias, however, remains unclear, not least because of a lack of translational tools. We established a new ambiguous-cue interpretation paradigm and, with respect to the etiology of depression, evaluated if environmental and genetic factors contribute to a negative bias. Rats were trained to press a lever to receive a food reward contingent to one tone and to press another lever in response to a different tone to avoid punishment by electric foot-shock. In the ambiguous-cue test, the lever-press responses to tones with frequencies intermediate to the trained tones were taken as indicators for the rats' expectation of a positive or negative event. A negative response bias because of decreased positive and increased negative responding was found in congenitally helpless rats, a genetic animal model of depression. Moreover, treatment with a combined noradrenergic-glucocorticoid challenge, mimicking stress-related changes in endogenous neuromodulation, biased rats away from positive responding. This response shift was accompanied by neuronal activation in dentate gyrus and amygdala. Thus, environmental and genetic risk factors for depression induce a response bias, which resembles the pessimistic bias of patients suffering from depression. The behavioral paradigm described constitutes a useful tool to study the neuronal basis of decision making under ambiguous conditions and may promote innovative pharmaco- and psychotherapy for depression.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/npp.2009.204
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subjects Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors - pharmacology
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Ambiguity
Amygdala - drug effects
Amygdala - metabolism
Analysis of Variance
Animal cognition
Animals
Behavior
Behavior, Animal
Behavioral Sciences
Bias
Biological and medical sciences
Biological Psychology
Conditioning (Psychology) - drug effects
Conditioning (Psychology) - physiology
Corticosterone - pharmacology
Cross-Over Studies
Cues
Decision making
Depression
Depression - genetics
Depression - physiopathology
Discrimination (Psychology) - drug effects
Discrimination (Psychology) - physiology
Disease Models, Animal
Experiments
Extinction, Psychological - drug effects
Extinction, Psychological - physiology
Feeding Behavior - drug effects
Feeding Behavior - physiology
Food Preferences - drug effects
Food Preferences - physiology
Genotype & phenotype
Hippocampus - drug effects
Hippocampus - metabolism
Male
Medical sciences
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mental depression
Mental health
Mood disorders
Morpholines - pharmacology
Neurobiology
Neurosciences
Original
original-article
Pharmacotherapy
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos - metabolism
Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Psychotherapy
Rats
Stress, Psychological - genetics
Stress, Psychological - physiopathology
title Ambiguous-Cue Interpretation is Biased Under Stress- and Depression-Like States in Rats
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