Modelling Madness Susan Totterdell Madness in Art Can

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Modelling Madness Susan Totterdell

Modelling Madness Susan Totterdell

Madness in Art

Madness in Art

Can we study mental disorders in animals? Are such disorders uniquely human Can we

Can we study mental disorders in animals? Are such disorders uniquely human Can we know if an animal is depressed or psychotic?

Talk plan • What makes an animal model • Outline of two major brain

Talk plan • What makes an animal model • Outline of two major brain disorders schizophrenia, depression • Suggested models • Model Validation • Example of validation process • Conclusions

What is a model? Any experimental preparation developed for the purpose of studying a

What is a model? Any experimental preparation developed for the purpose of studying a condition in the same or different species…. Typically models are preparations in animals that attempt to mimic a human condition

Purposes of an animal model • Mimic the syndrome in its entirety Difficult if

Purposes of an animal model • Mimic the syndrome in its entirety Difficult if your knowledge of the syndrome is incomplete and changing • Study potential therapeutic treatments Tends to concentrate on effects of known drugs which may limit their ability to identify new drugs with novel mechanisms of action

Other types of animal model • Mimic only specific signs and symptoms Symptoms being

Other types of animal model • Mimic only specific signs and symptoms Symptoms being modelled may not be diagnostic for the disorder but should be reliably measured and defined • Mimic the psychological constructs thought to be affected in the disorder Useful for studies that involve both patients and putative models

Schizophrenia • • Affects 1% of the population World wide distribution Positive and negative

Schizophrenia • • Affects 1% of the population World wide distribution Positive and negative symptoms Genetic element • Developmental • Brain tissue lost • Treated by dopamine antagonists

What types of models? In schizophrenia Developmental - isolation rearing Pharmacological - Psychostimulants Genetic

What types of models? In schizophrenia Developmental - isolation rearing Pharmacological - Psychostimulants Genetic - NR 1 subunit knock down Lesion - neonatal ventral hippocampal lesion 30 20 10 0 Lesion-induced 40 Genetic 50 Drug-induced 60 Developmental 70

Depression • Affects 10 -15% of the population • World wide distribution • Genetic

Depression • Affects 10 -15% of the population • World wide distribution • Genetic predisposition • Psychological & physiological symptoms • Involves loss of brain tissue • Treated by increasing 5 -HT levels

What types of models? Models of depression Uncontrollable Stress (learned helplessness) replicates the whole

What types of models? Models of depression Uncontrollable Stress (learned helplessness) replicates the whole illness do patients display learned helplessness? Behavioural Despair (+/- US) forced swim drugs reverse effects acutely Reward models (US or CMS) anhedonia - working for reward reversed by chronic not acute drug treatment Genetic models aim to reproduce aetiology complex, polygenic (5 -HT, stress signalling, neurotrophins)

Model validation Models are only as sound as the information currently available in the

Model validation Models are only as sound as the information currently available in the clinical literature Models assume a common basis for the behaviour and physiology of various species Models should be reliable in terms of induction and outcome. Variability cannot always be considered an error

Model validation - predicitve PREDICTIVE VALIDITY The ability of the model to predict the

Model validation - predicitve PREDICTIVE VALIDITY The ability of the model to predict the human phenomenon. Usually this refers to treatment (pharmacological isomorphism) • The most important criterion since the scientific process requires the testing of predictions • Predictive validity and reliability may be sufficient to define a good model.

Model validation- construct CONSTRUCT VALIDITY The accuracy with which a model measures what it

Model validation- construct CONSTRUCT VALIDITY The accuracy with which a model measures what it is intended to measure • Often considered the most important criterion but rarely established • Ongoing modification of the model as ideas about the disorder evolve

Model validation - face FACE VALIDITY The model resembles the disease being studied •

Model validation - face FACE VALIDITY The model resembles the disease being studied • Different species may not reflect similar symptoms even if the aetiology of the condition is known • Similarities between symptoms do not necessarily implicate similar aetiologies

Isolation rearing model Increased aggression Disrupts DA, 5 -HT systems Alters response to amphetamine

Isolation rearing model Increased aggression Disrupts DA, 5 -HT systems Alters response to amphetamine Disrupts PPI

Isolation rearing model Pulse Pre-pulse + pulse

Isolation rearing model Pulse Pre-pulse + pulse

Prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle

Prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle

Changes in the PFC 7. 00 (*) 6. 00 * 5. 00 4. 00

Changes in the PFC 7. 00 (*) 6. 00 * 5. 00 4. 00 3. 00 2. 00 1. 00 0. 00 Batch 1 2 Batch 3 6. 1 6 5. 9 5. 8 5. 7 5. 6 5. 5 5. 4 5. 3 5. 2 5. 1 Batches 1, 2 &13 Neuron number: no significant change * Mean ± SEM neuron number Batch 1 Day-Wilson et al. , Neuroscience 2006 Mean ± SEM volume/mm 3 Volume: significant reduction 450000 400000 350000 300000 250000 200000 150000 100000 50000 0 total neuron number Batch 1 Batch 2 1 Batch 3

Chandelier cells GAT-1 immunoreactivity in rat PFC Lewis et al. Hardwick et al. ,

Chandelier cells GAT-1 immunoreactivity in rat PFC Lewis et al. Hardwick et al. , Brain Research 2006

Conclusions from these studies • Animal models have a role to play in studies

Conclusions from these studies • Animal models have a role to play in studies of human brain disorders • Isolation-rearing has predictive validity and aspects of face, construct validity Behavioural/neuropathological Developmental Novel treatments • It is possible to compare data gained using a range of experimental techniques • This model may provide a useful way to identify novel therapeutic targets

General conclusions • It is probably not possible to model complex brain disorders in

General conclusions • It is probably not possible to model complex brain disorders in animals • Animal models are useful to relate symptoms to particular pathological changes • Animal models are crucial to pre-clinical screening of drugs • Genetic models will have to reflect the polygenic nature of these disorders