Procognitive profiling of a serotonin 5-HT6 receptor antagonist in a complex model
system in rats: A novel translational approach for clinical prediction
Introduction: The serial clinical failures of novel cognitive enhancer candidates
point out the lack of predictive power in the preceding animal experimentation. For
a more predictive profiling of putative procognitive drugs in rodents, we recently
elaborated a methodical approach which consists of three fundamental steps: 1. teaching
various learning tasks representing different cognitive domains to the same cohort
of animals with the aim to create a population with 'widespread knowledge'. 2. Applying
a cognitive deficit-inducing intervention to transform this cohort of animals to a
'patient population'. 3. Testing putative procognitive drugs with a 'clinical trial-like'
design on the wide spectrum of cognitive (dys)functions in the actual 'patient population'.
The present study has been the first trial to test the feasibility and utility of
the proposed system.Methods: The population with 'widespread knowledge' consisted
of 2 year old male Long-Evans rats with a learning history in five-choice serial reaction
time task (5-CSRTT, attentional paradigm), Morris water maze (MWM, spatial learning),
a cooperative task carried out in pairs (social learning), and a skill-learning task,
pot -jumping". For inducing cognitive deficit, thus creating a 'patient population'
we increased the difficulty of the tasks. For the cognitive enhancer mechanism to
test in the system we chose a serotonin 5-HT6 receptor antagonist compound, RO4368554.
Animals were randomly assigned to vehicleand drug treated groups based on their baseline
learning performance and their response in a pilot test of increase in task difficulty.
During the 13-day long treatment with 3 mg/kg ip. RO4368554 all the learning paradigms
were repeatedly run with increased difficulty supplemented with a novel object recognition
test (NOR, episodic memory).Results: In the 5-CSRTT, reducing the stimulus duration
from 1 s to 0.25 s caused a significant decrease in the percentage of correct responses
(from 52 % to 31 % in the control group) which was not affected by the 5-HT6 receptor
antagonist treatment (correct responses decreased from 58 % to 31 %). In the MWM,
replacing the escape platform to a new location did not mean a hard challenge for
the rats. Members of both groups could find it within a relatively short time: mean
escape latencies were 83 s and 65 s at the first replacement trial and 58 s and 74
s at the second one in the control and drug-treated groups, respectively. In the cooperation
paradigm, where the rats had to perform simultaneous nose-pokes to get a reward, task
difficulty was increased by requiring two consecutive simultaneous nose-poking from
the animals. This caused a fall in the percentage of successful trials in both groups
(from 48 % to 12 % and from 50 % to 20 % in the saline - and drug-treated group, respectively),
however, by the end of the treatment RO4368554-treated animals showed significantly
higher performance (29 %) than saline treated rats (2%). The NOR test, carried out
with a 5-h delay, revealed poor recognition memory in both groups (discrimination
index (DI) values were 0.13 and 0.06 for saline and RO4368554, respectively). Performance
in the pot jumping test was also not improved by the drug-treatment.Conclusions: The
applied study design allowed parallel measurements of the action of the test compound
on several cognitive functions and to follow its time course. RO4368554 did not show
notable effects on impaired attention and visual recognition; nor did it affect spatial
and procedural learning, but it exerted beneficial effect on cooperative behaviour.
The revealed activity pattern highlight the cognitive domain most sensitive to the
particular drug effect and may give hints for further target validating and clinical
studies.