Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4312097 Behavioural Brain Research 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Isolation rearing induces differential effects in RHA-I and RLA-I rats.•Isolation rearing induces PPI deficits, hyperactivity and anxiety in RHA-I rats.•Isolation rearing induces spatial reference memory deficits in RHA-I rats.•Isolation rearing induces spatial working memory deficits in RLA-I rats.•RHA-I rats may be a valid model for schizophrenia-relevant features.

Social isolation of rats induces a constellation of behavioral alterations known as “isolation syndrome” that are consistent with some of the positive and cognitive symptoms observed in schizophrenic patients. In the present study we have assessed whether isolation rearing of inbred Roman high-avoidance (RHA-I) and Roman low-avoidance (RLA-I) strains can lead to the appearance of some of the key features of the “isolation syndrome”, such as prepulse inhibition (PPI) deficits, increased anxious behavior, hyperactivity and memory/learning impairments. Compared to RLA-I rats, the results show that isolation rearing (IR) in RHA-I rats has a more profound impact, as they exhibit isolation-induced PPI deficits, increased anxiety, hyperactivity and long-term reference memory deficits, while isolated RLA-I rats only exhibit deficits in a spatial working memory task. These results give further support to the validity of RHA-I rats as a genetically-based model of schizophrenia relevant-symptoms.

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