scholarly journals Behavioral flexibility in an OCD mouse model: Impaired Pavlovian reversal learning in SAPAP3 mutants

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bastijn J. G. van den Boom ◽  
Adriana H. Mooij ◽  
Ieva Misevičiūtė ◽  
Damiaan Denys ◽  
Ingo Willuhn

ABSTRACTObsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by obsessive thinking, compulsive behavior, and anxiety, and is often accompanied by cognitive deficits. The neuropathology of OCD involves dysregulation of cortical-striatal circuits. Similar to OCD patients, SAPAP3 knockout mice 3 (SAPAP3−/−) exhibit compulsive behavior (grooming), anxiety, and dysregulated cortical-striatal function. However, it is unknown whether SAPAP3−/− display cognitive deficits and how these different behavioral traits relate to one another. SAPAP3−/− and wild-type littermates (WT) were trained in a Pavlovian conditioning task pairing the delivery of visual cues with that of sucrose solution. After mice learned to discriminate between a reward-predicting conditioned stimulus (CS+) and a non-reward stimulus (CS−), contingencies were reversed (CS+ became CS− and vice versa). Additionally, we assessed grooming, anxiety, and general activity. SAPAP3−/− acquired Pavlovian approach behavior similarly to WT, albeit less vigorously and with a different strategy. However, unlike WT, SAPAP3−/− were unable to adapt their behavior after contingency reversal, exemplified by a lack of re-establishing CS+ approach behavior (sign tracking). Surprisingly, such behavioral inflexibility, decreased vigor, compulsive grooming, and anxiety were unrelated. This study demonstrates that SAPAP3−/− are capable of Pavlovian learning, but lack flexibility to adapt associated conditioned approach behavior. Thus, SAPAP3−/− do not only display compulsive-like behavior and anxiety, but also cognitive deficits, confirming and extending the validity of SAPAP3−/− as a suitable model for OCD. The observation that compulsive-like behavior, anxiety, and behavioral inflexibility were unrelated suggests a non-causal relationship between these traits and may be of clinical relevance for OCD patients.

2018 ◽  
pp. 112-132
Author(s):  
Stefania Fadda ◽  
Andrea Gragnani ◽  
Alessandro Couyoumdjian ◽  
Francesco Mancini

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. e12557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bastijn J.G. van den Boom ◽  
Adriana H. Mooij ◽  
Ieva Misevičiūtė ◽  
Damiaan Denys ◽  
Ingo Willuhn

2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 46-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr D. Shabanov ◽  
Andrei A. Lebedev ◽  
Natalia D. Yakushina ◽  
Anna G. Pshenichnaya ◽  
Eugenii R. Bychkov

A rodent marble test can be qualified as the most informative test of evaluation of obsessive-compulsive disorder as a neurobiological component of pathological gambling. Several behavioral components of obsession (obsessive and anxious ideas) and compulsions (obsessive actions) directed to anxiety reduction are modeled in this test. The effect of psychostimulant amphetamine on the rat behavior was studied in a marble test, anxiety-phobic model (scale), open field (evaluation of motor and emotional activity) and resident-intruder test (Intraspecies behavior). Amphetamine 0.5 and 1.5 mg/kg increased a number of burying bolls and elevated anxiety level in dose dependent manner. This accompanied with reduction of explorative activity, elevation of motor activity and number of individual behavioral patterns. Therefore, dopaminergic system of the brain activated with amphetamine is involved in obsessive-compulsive behavior and pathological gambling.


CNS Spectrums ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 191-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Eilam ◽  
Henry Szechtman

AbstractRats treated chronically with the D2/D3, dopamine receptor agonist quinpirole show a pattern of behavior that meets a set of ethologically derived criteria of compulsive behavior in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Moreover, in both quinpirole-treated rats and OCD patients, the structure of compulsive rituals appear similar in being composed of relatively few motor acts that are organized in a flexible yet recurrent manner. In addition, the development of compulsive behavior in quinpirole-treated rats is attenuated by the OCD pharmacotherapeutic drug clomipramine. These similarities support the validity of quinpirole-treated rats as a psychostimulant-induced animal model of OCD. Considering that the induction of compulsive behavior in the rat model involves chronic hyperstimulation of dopamine receptors, this raises the possibility that dopaminergic mechanisms may play a role in OCD, at least in some subtypes of this disorder.


1996 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 1261-1269 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Veale ◽  
B. J. Sahakian ◽  
A. M. Owen ◽  
I. M. Marks

SynopsisForty patients with obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) were compared to matched healthy controls on neuropsychological tests which are sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction. On a computerized version of the Tower of London test of planning, the patients were no different from healthy controls in the accuracy of their solutions. However, when they made a mistake, they spent more time than the controls in generating alternative solutions or checking that the next move would be correct. The results suggest that OCD patients have a selective deficit in generating alternative strategies when they make a mistake. In a separate attentional set-shifting task, OCD patients were impaired in a simple discrimination learning task and showed a continuous cumulative increase in the number who failed at each stage of the task, including the crucial extra-dimensional set shifting stage. This suggests that OCD patients show deficits in both acquiring and maintaining cognitive sets.The cognitive deficits in OCD may be summarized as: (i) being easily distracted by other competing stimuli; (ii) excessive monitoring and checking of the response to ensure a mistake does not occur; and (iii) when a mistake does occur, being more rigid at setting aside the main goal and planning the necessary subgoals. Both studies support the evidence of fronto-striatal dysfunction in OCD and the results are discussed in terms of an impaired Supervisory Attentional System.


eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire M Gillan ◽  
Michal Kosinski ◽  
Robert Whelan ◽  
Elizabeth A Phelps ◽  
Nathaniel D Daw

Prominent theories suggest that compulsive behaviors, characteristic of obsessive-compulsive disorder and addiction, are driven by shared deficits in goal-directed control, which confers vulnerability for developing rigid habits. However, recent studies have shown that deficient goal-directed control accompanies several disorders, including those without an obvious compulsive element. Reasoning that this lack of clinical specificity might reflect broader issues with psychiatric diagnostic categories, we investigated whether a dimensional approach would better delineate the clinical manifestations of goal-directed deficits. Using large-scale online assessment of psychiatric symptoms and neurocognitive performance in two independent general-population samples, we found that deficits in goal-directed control were most strongly associated with a symptom dimension comprising compulsive behavior and intrusive thought. This association was highly specific when compared to other non-compulsive aspects of psychopathology. These data showcase a powerful new methodology and highlight the potential of a dimensional, biologically-grounded approach to psychiatry research.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sa-Ik Hong ◽  
Seungwoo Kang ◽  
Minryung Song ◽  
Minsu Yang ◽  
Matthew Baker ◽  
...  

Abstract The external globus pallidus (GPe) is an integrative hub and gateway for behavioral flexibility in reward-related behaviors. However, it remains unknown whether enriched astrocytes in the GPe guide behavioral flexibility. Here, we trained mice to exhibit goal-directed and habitual reward-seeking behaviors using the behavior tasks with effort- and time-based reward delivery, respectively. Then, we examined the temporal dynamics of GPe astrocytes during goal-directed and habitual learning. Overall, GPe astrocytes were substantially silenced during habitual learning compared to goal-directed learning. In the timescale of action events, GPe astrocyte activities were increased immediately after termination of reward-taking behavior before the following action. However, during habitual learning, the increase of astrocyte activity was not evident. Moreover, support vector machine (SVM) analysis demonstrated that GPe astrocytes dynamics predicted whether mice perform goal-directed or habitual behaviors. Interestingly, chemogenetic activation of GPe astrocytes, which dampened GPe neuronal firings and habitual behaviors, exhibting goal-directed behaviors. Strikingly, brief and repeated attentional stimulations recapitulated the effect of chemogenetic activation of GPe in intervening the habitual reward-seeking behaviors with increased GPe astrocyte activities. Our findings reveal a novel insight that increasing GPe astrocytic activities attenuates habitual behavior and improves behavioral flexibility, which may provide a potential therapeutic target for decision-making-related disorders, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder and addiction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (S2) ◽  
pp. S110-S111 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Smith ◽  
N. Benzina ◽  
F. Vorspan ◽  
L. Mallet ◽  
K. N’Diaye

Compulsive behavior is a core symptom of both obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and cocaine addiction (CA). Across both pathologies, one can identify a priori goal-directed actions (purportedly anxiolytic checking or washing in OCD and pleasure-seeking drug use in addiction) that turn into rigid, ritualized and repetitive behaviors over which the patient loose control. One possible psychopathological mechanism underlying compulsivity is behavioral inflexibility, namely a deficit in the aptitude to dynamically adapt to novel contexts and changing reward rules. The probabilistic reversal learning paradigm allows to objectively assess behavioral flexibility by challenging participants with a task where they have to learn through trials-and-errors which of two stimuli is the most-often rewarded one, while adjusting to sudden inconspicuous contingency reversals. We therefore hypothesized that both OCD and CA would be associated with impaired cognitive flexibility, as measured through perseverative response rate following contingency reversals in this task. Interestingly, impulsivity may also be assessed within this task via the tendency of participants to switch from one stimulus to the other following probabilistic errors. To investigate cognitive inflexibility in relation to CA and OCD respectively, we first compared the performance in a probabilistic reversal learning task of cocaine users, ex cocaine users (abstinent for 2 months or more), and controls, as well as that of participants from the general population whose obsessive-compulsive traits were assessed using the OCI-R, a well-validated self-questionnaire. Our task yielded results similar to those found in the literature: cocaine addicts changed their responses more often, and learned less effectively. Ex-cocaine addicts performed better than addicts but worse than controls, suggesting that addicts’ poor results may be in part explained by reversible cognitive consequences of addiction. Addicts with less cognitive impairments may also be less likely to relapse. Regarding the relationship of flexibility to subclinical OCD traits, we found no link between OCI-R score and perseveration, or between impulsiveness and excessive switching.


Author(s):  
Monnica T. Williams ◽  
Chad T. Wetterneck ◽  
John Hart ◽  
Eric Lee ◽  
Street Russell

The embarrassing nature of unwanted sexual thoughts in individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) increases shame and generates feelings of disgust. This requires a specialized approach by clinicians to address the challenges associated with the sexual subtype of OCD (S-OCD). This chapter first addresses psychoeducation as it relates to unwanted sexual thoughts, facing fears, and building mental fitness. The authors then provide a session-by-session guide designed to assist clinicians in the provision of exposure and response prevention therapy (Ex/RP) to S-OCD sufferers. The protocol provides strategies aimed at increasing a client’s behavioral flexibility and control in the specialized treatment of S-OCD using Ex/RP and also includes cognitive therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), and mindfulness techniques.


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