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  2. Dual orexin/hypocretin receptor antagonism attenuates NMDA receptor hypofunction-induced attentional impairments in a rat model of schizophrenia

Dual orexin/hypocretin receptor antagonism attenuates NMDA receptor hypofunction-induced attentional impairments in a rat model of schizophrenia

  • Behav Brain Res. 2023 May 16;450:114497. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2023.114497.
Eden B Maness 1 Sarah A Blumenthal 2 Joshua A Burk 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Psychological Sciences, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA 23187, USA; VA Boston Healthcare System and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, West Roxbury, MA 02132, USA. Electronic address: [email protected].
  • 2 Center for Translational Social Neuroscience, Emory National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
  • 3 Department of Psychological Sciences, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA 23187, USA.
Abstract

Schizophrenia is a neuropsychiatric condition that is associated with impaired attentional processing and performance. Failure to support increasing attentional load may result, in part, from inhibitory failure in attention-relevant cortical regions, and available antipsychotics often fail to address this issue. Orexin/hypocretin receptors are found throughout the brain and are expressed on neurons relevant to both attention and schizophrenia, highlighting them as a potential target to treat schizophrenia-associated attentional dysfunction. In the present experiment, rats (N = 14) trained in a visual sustained attention task that required discrimination of trials which presented a visual signal from trials during which no signal was presented. Once trained, rats were then co-administered the psychotomimetic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist dizocilpine (MK-801: 0 or 0.1 mg/kg, intraperitoneal injections) and the dual orexin receptor antagonist filorexant (MK-6096: 0, 0.1, or 1 mM, intracerebroventricular infusions) prior to task performance across six sessions. Dizocilpine impaired overall accuracy during signal trials, slowed reaction times for correctly-responded trials, and increased the number of omitted trials throughout the task. Dizocilpine-induced increases in signal trial deficits, correct response latencies, and errors of omission were reduced following infusions of the 0.1 mM, but not 1 mM, dose of filorexant. As such, orexin receptor blockade may improve attentional deficits in a state of NMDA receptor hypofunction.

Keywords

Attention; Motivation; Orexin; Rat; Schizophrenia; Vigilance.

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