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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 1999, 19(14):6157-6168
5-HT1B Receptor Knock-Out Mice Exhibit Increased Exploratory
Activity and Enhanced Spatial Memory Performance in the Morris Water
Maze
Gaël
Malleret1,
René
Hen2,
Jean-Louis
Guillou1,
Louis
Segu1, and
Marie-Christine
Buhot1
1 Laboratoire de Neurosciences Comportementales et
Cognitives, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité
Mixte de Recherche 5807, Université de Bordeaux 1, 33405 Talence
cedex, France, and 2 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior,
Columbia University, New York, New York 10032
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ABSTRACT |
In an attempt to characterize the contribution of the 5-HT1B
receptor to behavior, 5-HT1B knock-out (KO) mice were subjected to a
battery of behavioral paradigms aimed at differentiating various
components of cognitive and emotional behaviors. In an object
exploration task, wild-type (WT) and 5-HT1B KO mice did not differ in
locomotor activity. 5-HT1B KO mice, however, displayed lower
thigmotaxis (an index of anxiety) associated with a higher level of
object exploratory activity, but no genotype differences were observed
in the elevated plus maze. 5-HT1B KO mice also displayed a lack of
exploratory habituation. In the spatial version of the Morris water
maze, 5-HT1B KO mice showed higher performances in acquisition and
transfer test, which was not observed in the visual version of the
task. No genotype differences were found in contextual fear
conditioning, because both WT and 5-HT1B KO mice were able to remember
the context where they had received the aversive stimulus. The deletion
of the 5-HT1B receptor, associated with appropriate behavioral
paradigms, thus allowed us to dissociate anxiety from response to
novelty, and perseverative behavior (lack of habituation) from adaptive
behavioral inhibition underlying cognitive flexibility (transfer stage
in the water maze). The deletion of the 5-HT1B receptor did not result
in significant developmental plasticities for other major 5-HT receptor
types but may have influenced other neurotransmission systems. The
5-HT1B receptor may be a key target for serotonin in the modulation of
cognitive behavior, particularly in situations involving a high
cognitive demand.
Key words:
knock-out mice; serotonin 1B receptors (5-HT1B); learning
and memory; anxiety; Morris water maze; receptor
autoradiography
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INTRODUCTION |
The multiplicity of serotonin
[5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] receptors, their linkage to different
second messengers, and their neuronal distribution (Hoyer and Martin,
1996 ) have to be taken into account in the analysis of cognitive
functions potentially modulated by 5-HT (Buhot, 1997 ). Serotonin
receptors occupy strategic cellular and subcellular locations in the
hippocampus, a key cerebral structure involved in spatial learning and
memory (O'Keefe and Nadel, 1978 ; Buhot et al., 1991 ; Jaffard and
Meunier, 1993 ; Jarrard, 1993 ) that receives a main influence from the
septal cholinergic system (Brito et al., 1983 ; Kelsey and Vargas,
1993 ).
Among the different 5-HT receptors, the 5-HT1B receptor is
predominantly located on axon terminals where it generally inhibits neurotransmitter release (Boschert et al., 1994 ). These receptors, located on terminals of retinal ganglion cells in the superior colliculus (Boulenguez et al., 1996 ), control visual attentional processes (Boulenguez et al., 1995 ). The presence of 5-HT1B receptors in the hippocampal formation suggests a potential role for these receptors in modulating memory processes. Serotonin controls
acetylcholine release through 5-HT1B receptors located on septal
terminals in the hippocampus (Maura and Raiteri, 1986 ) and glutamate
release in the dorsal subiculum through 5-HT1B receptors located on CA1 pyramidal neuron terminals (Aït Amara et al., 1995 ; Boeijinga and Boddeke, 1996 ). Rats receiving a stimulation of hippocampal (CA1)
5-HT1B receptors were found to be impaired in a spatial learning task,
displaying more reference than working memory errors (Buhot et al.,
1995 ), and exhibited neophobic reactions in an object exploration task
(Buhot and Naïli, 1995 ). These results suggest that the
inactivation of 5-HT1B receptors might affect attention and emotion and
have positive effects on learning and memory processes.
The lack of specific 5-HT1B antagonists led us to adopt a molecular
biological strategy for studying the implication of 5-HT1B receptor in
cognitive functions, especially in the cognition/emotion balance, by
using 5-HT1B receptor knock-out (5-HT1B KO) mice (Saudou et al., 1994 )
as subjects using different hippocampal-dependent and -independent tasks.
We used behavioral paradigms that are mainly targeted toward the
analysis of spatial behavior and spatial memory and otherwise do not
require food deprivation [the 5-HT1B receptor being involved in food
intake (Lee and Simanski, 1997 )]. The object exploration paradigm
induces responses to novelty, involving cognitive (active exploration
and habituation) as well as emotional reactions, that are mainly
controlled by the hippocampus (Save et al., 1992a ,b ; Buhot and
Naïli, 1995 ). Hippocampal-mediated memory performances were
further assessed using the Morris water maze (Morris, 1984 ). We
assessed spatial reference and working memory and visual orientation using appropriate versions of the task. To evaluate whether the lack of
5-HT1B receptor affects simple or complex associative learning, we also
tested the mice in cued (hippocampal-independent) and contextual
(hippocampal-dependent) fear conditioning (Garcia et al., 1997 ).
The constitutive 5-HT1B KO mice may exhibit a degree of neuronal
plasticity attributable to the absence of the receptor during development, which may be responsible for the observed behavioral changes. It is thus clear that our model cannot definitely decide whether the 5-HT1B receptor is directly or indirectly involved in
memory processes. The "chronic" deletion of the 5-HT1B receptor may
also affect indirectly cognitive functions through a modification of
emotional state, locomotor activity, or some form of impulsiveness of
the animal. These different behavioral components were separately analyzed further using the elevated plus maze, activity boxes, and
spontaneous alternation, respectively. To assess possible developmental
plasticities of 5-HT receptors in anatomical structures related to the
behaviors under study, the density of 5-HT1A, 5HT1B, and 5-HT1D binding
sites was determined by quantitative autoradiography.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals
The subjects were male 129-Sv-ter wild-type (WT) and homozygous
5-HT1B KO mice. On receipt from the breeding colony (Transgenose Laboratory, Bordeaux II University), they were housed individually in
standard transparent laboratory cages (26 × 12 × 14 cm) in a temperature-controlled colony room (22 ± 1°C), adjacent to
the experimental room. They were maintained on a 12 hr artificial light/dark cycle (with lights on at 6:00 A.M.) and provided with food
and water ad libitum. The experiments started when the
animals were ~5 months old, weighing 25-35 gm. They were tested
during the light phase between 10:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.
Object exploration
General materials and methods. The subjects of this
study were 18 naive male WT and 15 naive male 5-HT1B KO mice. The
apparatus consisted of a circular open field, 70 cm in diameter with 30 cm high walls, made of white cardboard [for details, see Buhot and
Naïli (1995) ]. The mice were handled daily for 10 min during a
week before they were subjected to two exploration tests, separated by
a month. Within each experiment, WT and 5-HT1B KO mice were tested
alternately to avoid any circadian effect on the activity of the
animals. The open field was cleaned only at the end of the experiment
for a given animal. Animal movements (distance and duration) were
recorded using the "VIDEOTRACK" system (Viewpoint, Lyon, France) as
previously used for rats (Buhot and Naïli, 1995 ). Locomotor
activity was assessed by fast movements (displacements equal to or
faster than 10 cm/sec) in the entire open field. Object-oriented exploration was assessed by slow movements (slower than 10 cm/sec) within object(s) area(s). Thigmotaxic behavior, i.e., avoiding open
areas, here the center of the field, was assessed by the relative time
spent at periphery, that is, in a crown-shaped region (5 cm in width)
close to the limit of the cylinder. The effect of genotype (WT vs
5-HT1B KO) on locomotor activity, thigmotaxic behavior, and
object-oriented exploration was evaluated by using one-way ANOVAs
(Statview 4.5, SuperANOVA, Abacus Concept), whenever more complex
analyses (if not otherwise precise) were not necessary. When analyses
across sessions were required, the data were introduced into two-way
ANOVAs for repeated measures. Further F tests for particular
within-group comparisons were conducted when the main effects were
significant. Other pair-comparisons were performed by a post
hoc (Scheffe) test, when necessary.
Single-session task. Each mouse was placed for 5 min in the
open field containing a single object, a brilliant sphere (Christmas ball) 5 cm in diameter, located in the middle of the arena.
Multiple-session task. Two conspicuous patterns were
attached to the wall of the open field: a circular white pattern (18 cm
in diameter) with black dots and a squared white pattern (18 cm × 18 cm) with black vertical strips. Four different objects were used
that differed mainly by shape: (1) a small shampoo bottle (3.5 cm in
diameter, 6.5 cm in height), (2) a water jug (4 cm in diameter, 7 cm in
height), (3) a thin cylinder (3.5 cm in diameter, 7 cm in height), or
(4) a wide cylinder (5 cm in diameter, 5 cm in height). Each mouse
received seven 6 min exploratory sessions, separated by 3 min
intersession intervals, during which they were placed in their cages.
The sequence of the successive sessions (and related observed behavior)
followed the procedure for rats used by Buhot and Naïli
(1995) .
Locomotor activity, thigmotaxic behavior, and object-oriented
exploration across sessions were submitted to ANOVAs for
statistical evaluation with genotype as between-subject and successive
sessions as within-subject factors.
Object exploratory activity was first assessed during session 2 on the
basis of average mean exploratory activity toward the objects
[(A+B+C)/3], compared with the same measure in the area containing no
object. Exploratory habituation was assessed by comparing the average
mean exploratory activity toward the objects [(A+B+C)/3] during
sessions 2, 3, and 4. A decrease in exploratory activity between
sessions 2 and 4 is taken as an index of habituation. The reaction to
spatial change was assessed by comparing the mean exploratory activity
toward the displaced object (C) and the nondisplaced objects
[(A+B)/2] during sessions 4 and 5 (test session that included the
spatial change). The reaction to the new object was assessed by
comparing the exploratory activity toward object A during session 6 (the preceding habituation session) and toward object D during session
7 (when the new object D replaced object A in the same area). The
nonspecific reaction was assessed by comparing the exploratory activity
between sessions 6 and 7 toward the familiar object B, i.e., the one
that never changed.
Statistical analyses were conducted on the data using ANOVAs with the
genotype as the between-subject factor, and session, "area" (object
vs no object) or the category of "object" (displaced and
nondisplaced, new and familiar) as within-subject factors.
Spatial learning in a water maze
General materials and methods. The apparatus was a
white circular swimming pool (140 cm in diameter) with walls 40 cm
high. It was located in a room with various distal cues. The pool was filled with water (30 cm depth) maintained at 20°C, which was made
opaque by the addition of a nontoxic white paint. Inside the pool was a
removable, circular (13 cm in diameter) Plexiglas platform positioned
such that its top surface was 0.5 cm below the surface of the water.
The platform, which served as the refuge from the water, is generally
located in the center of an arbitrarily defined quadrant of the maze.
Data were collected using a video camera fixed to the ceiling of the
room and connected to the VIDEOTRACK system and to a video recorder,
both located in an adjacent room that received the individual home
cages of mice currently tested.
On the first day, each mouse received a first pretraining session that
consisted of placing the mouse on the platform where it had to stay at
least 15 sec, followed by a 30 sec swimming period, and ended by
several trials of climbing onto the platform until each subject was
able to climb without help. This nonspatial procedure was required to
avoid confusion between procedural aspects of the task and subsequent
spatial performance (Beiko et al., 1997 ). During the learning stages
proper, each animal was subjected to a daily four-trial session. Before
the first trial of the first session (second day), the mouse was placed
for 15 sec on the platform. Each trial consisted of releasing the mouse
into the water facing the outer edge of the pool at one of the
quadrants (except the quadrant where the platform was located) and
letting the animal escape to the platform before 90 sec had elapsed. A
trial terminated when the animal reached the platform, where it
remained for 15 sec. Mice that failed to find the platform within this
time limit were placed onto the platform by the experimenter and had to
stay there for 15 sec before being removed and placed back in their home cage for a 15 min inter-trial interval. The cages were placed beneath a heat lamp to reduce core temperature loss. The releasing point differed at each trial (for example, east, west, south, and east
if the platform was in the north quadrant), and different sequences of
releasing points were used from day to day. The mice were run by squads
of six, i.e., they had their first trial successively, then
their second, until the fourth and last one; WT and 5-HT1B KO mice ran
alternately. On the last day of different learning stages, the
animals were generally given a probe trial, replacing the fourth trial
of the session, which consisted of letting the mouse swim in the pool
while the platform was removed for a fixed duration (60 sec).
Animal movements were recorded using the VIDEOTRACK system as described
previously (see Object exploration, Materials and Methods). The data
from the computer were processed using Excel (Microsoft). This
processing allowed us to calculate the escape latency (time required to
find the platform, in seconds), the path length (distance covered by
the mouse until it finds the platform, in centimeters), and the
swimming speed (velocity, in centimeters/second). Genotype (WT vs
5-HT1B KO), trial, and day were the main factors of the ANOVAs (using
StatView 4.5 or SuperANOVA, Abacus Concepts). Particular analyses were
conducted, as for the probe trials, with the time spent (1) in the
different quadrants (QUADRANT) or (2) in the exact platform zone (or
equivalent virtual areas in the other quadrants: PLATFORM)
(Perrot-Sinal et al., 1996 ). The number of entries onto PLATFORM, as
compared with the other three equivalent zones, was taken as revealing
the number of crossings above this limited zone. ANOVAs were performed
on these data with the genotype and area (four zones of the same type:
QUADRANT or PLATFORM) as the main factors.
Water maze: Experiment I. The subjects of this experiment
were 12 naive male WT and 12 naive male 5-HT1B KO mice. On the first day, after the procedural pretraining, each mouse performed a visually
guided orientation session, i.e., a series of four trials for which the
submerged platform had a visible white cylinder (4 cm in diameter, 7 cm
in height) on the top. The animal was first placed during 15 sec on the
platform (located in the center of the north quadrant) and then
released from an arbitrary peripheral location, from which it had to
return to the platform. For each of the additional three trials, the
platform was displaced to a new location, and the animal was released
from a new peripheral position. The experiment was performed with the
hidden platform to evaluate spatial reference memory performances and
was composed of three main steps: (1) acquisition stage (9 d), with the
escape platform located in the center of the north quadrant; (2)
transfer stage (4 d), with the platform located in the center of the
east quadrant; and (3) long-term retrieval test, which was an
additional session of four trials (the platform remained in the same
east quadrant), performed 3 weeks after the end of the transfer stage. In this experiment, the only measure available was the escape latency
to the platform.
Water maze: Experiment II. Given the results of Experiment
I, we decided to replicate the experiment and to record additional variables, allowing a more precise determination of the nature of performances, such as path length to reach the platform and velocity. New groups of 12 WT and 12 5-HT1B KO mice were subjected to
the experiment using the same spatial reference memory paradigm as for
Experiment I except that (1) they did not perform the initial visually
guided orientation task with the nonstationary platform, and (2) the
experiment was followed by a 5 d working memory (repeated acquisition) task. Each day the platform was placed in a new location, and the mouse had to find it across four successive trials (10 min
inter-trial interval). This paradigm involves extinction of the use of
reference memory, and the mice had to solve a new spatial problem each
day. The first daily trial was preceded by the exposure of the mouse to
the platform location (for 15 sec on the platform). The releasing
points were different within a session. The successive stages of this
experiment were thus: acquisition stage (10 d, with a probe trial on
the fourth trial of the last day); transfer stage (4 d, with a probe
trial on the fourth trial of the last day); and working memory task (5 d).
Two weeks after the completion of the water maze (Experiment II), the
same mice performed the following tests, in the order described here,
separated by a 1 week delay between each.
Spontaneous alternation
The apparatus was a Y-maze made of clear opaque Plexiglas. It
consisted of three identical arms (34 × 10 × 18 cm)
converging at the center of a triangular area, so that they formed a
symmetrical Y shape (120° of angular deviation from each other). The
apparatus was placed on the floor of the experimental room, and a video camera hung above the apparatus recorded the behavior of the animals. WT and 5-HT1B KO mice were placed individually in the central area and
allowed to explore the maze freely for 6 min. The sequence of arms
visited was recorded. Global activity was assessed by the number of
visits to the different arms. Simple alternation (vs repetition) was
defined as a visit to one arm followed by a visit to another arm.
Second order alternation was defined as the consecutive entry into all
three arms on consecutive choices. In this case, the full alternation
frequency was calculated as the ratio of (actual alternation/maximum
alternations possible). The frequency of occurrence of full alternation
on three arms was compared with the frequency of occurrence of
incomplete or null alternation patterns. Because the second order
alternation may reveal stereotyped behavior based on a preferred side
(clockwise or counterclockwise exploration), an additional index of
laterality was calculated. The data were statistically evaluated by
ANOVAs, with the genotype as the between-subject factor, and
alternation (vs repetition), left (vs right), and different patterns of
second order alternation (three levels) as the within-subject factors.
Elevated plus maze
The elevated plus maze was used to assess anxiety in WT and
5-HT1B KO mice to determine possible interfering emotional factors that
may modulate performance in learning and memory tasks (Chopin and
Briley, 1987 ). The plus maze was made of four, dark gray Plexiglas arms, two open arms (67 × 7 cm), and two enclosed arms (67 × 7 × 17 cm) that formed a cross shape with the two open arms
opposite each other. The maze was 55 cm above the floor and dimly
illuminated (20 lux). Photobeam cells (connected to a computer), placed
at two different levels along the length of each arm, allowed detection of the passage of the animal from the central platform (7 × 7 cm)
to any arm, and from the middle of an arm to its extremity (and
return). WT and 5-HT1B KO mice were placed individually on the central
platform, facing an open arm, and allowed to explore the apparatus for
8 min. Global activity was assessed by the number of entries into the
four arms. Anxiety was assessed by comparing the activity in the open
versus enclosed arms, using an index taking into account the time spent
in each category of arm as the ratio: open arms/(open + enclosed arms).
The lower value is this index, the higher is the level of anxiety. The
data were statistically evaluated using ANOVAs, with the genotype as
the between factor and the arm (open and enclosed) as the within factor.
Fear conditioning
We assessed contextual (hippocampal-mediated) memory using the
conditioned fear paradigm with two groups of WT and 5-HT1B KO mice that
had been subjected previously (1 month before) to the water maze task
(Experiment II), using a procedure adapted from Bach et al. (1995)
[see also Garcia et al. (1997) ]. The test is composed of three 6 min
sessions. On the training day, each mouse (either a WT or a 5-HT1B KO,
in alternation) was brought to a novel room and placed for 6 min in the
conditioning chamber, a mouse operant rectangular box (30 × 24 × 22 cm) with a floor made of 60 stainless steel rods (2 mm in
diameter) spaced 5 mm and connected to a generator that delivered
electric shocks. Two footshocks (0.9 mA, 2 msec) were delivered at 2 and 4 min after the mouse was placed in the chamber. Two tones (60 dB,
900 Hz, 20 sec) were paired with the onset of the shocks. Memory for
either the context-shock or tone-shock association was assessed 24 hr after the training session during two successive 6 min test sessions by
measuring the amount of freezing (freezing conditioned emotional response) exhibited by the mouse in the presence of the old context alone (without tone) and then (2 hr later) in the presence of the tone
(60 dB, 900 Hz, 2 min, occurring at 2 min) in a novel context (white
Plexiglas chamber, same dimensions as the first chamber, without grid
floor). The apparatus was cleaned with water after each passage. The
experiment took place in a dimly lit room (20 lux). The VIDEOTRACK
system was used to measure the duration of freezing, i.e., time spent
in total immobility (threshold of movements <1.5 cm/sec). ANOVAs were
conducted on these data as previously described with the genotype,
session (3 levels), and block of 2 min (three levels for a given
session) as the main factors.
Locomotor activity
Locomotor activity was assessed using cylindrical activity cages
where the animal can move inside a cylindrical corridor (outer diameter, 20 cm; inner diameter, 10 cm). Eight photobeam cells connected to a computer allowed us to measure the activity defined as
the number of revolutions per minute made by the mouse. A battery of
six cages enabled six mice to be tested simultaneously. WT and 5-HT1B
KO mice were placed individually in one of the cages at 10:00 A.M., and
they were retrieved at 11:00 A.M. the same day. The time sampling
chosen was a measure every 5 min.
The 5-HT1A/1B receptor agonist
5-methoxy-3-(1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyrid-4-yl)-1H-indole (RU 24969, 5 mg/kg, i.p.) induces hyperlocomotion in rats and mice (Oberlander et
al., 1987 ). 5-HT1B KO adult mice are not sensitive to this treatment
(Saudou et al., 1994 ), which suggests that this drug affects locomotion
via 5-HT1B receptors. Mice were placed individually in the activity
cages (as described above) for a 60 min period; they then received an
injection of RU 24969 (5 mg/kg, i.p., dissolved in saline) before being
returned to the activity cage for two additional 60 min periods. The
time sampling chosen was a measure every 30 min.
Receptor autoradiography
Preparation of the brains, coronal frontal sections, incubation,
and exposure were performed as described in Boulenguez et al. (1993) .
5-HT1B/1D binding sites were labeled with 0.3 nM
serotonin-O-carboxy-methyl-glycyl[125I]tyrosinamide
(S-CM-G[125I]TN H2, 2000 Ci/mmol; Immunotech SA).
5-HT1B and 5-HT1D binding sites were specifically labeled by adding
10 5 M
8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT; RBI, Natick, MA],
and 10 6 M
3-(1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyrid-4-yl)pyrrolo[3,2-b]pyrid-5-one (CP 93129;
Pfizer) (Macor et al., 1990 ), respectively, to the incubation medium.
5-HT1A binding sites were labeled with 1 nM
[3H] 8-OH-DPAT (140 Ci/mmol, Amersham).
Nonspecific binding was determined in the presence of
10 5 M serotonin (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO). Quantitative analysis of autoradiograms was performed with a
computer device for image analysis (Biolab) (Segu et al., 1990 ). Four
to 11 brains from each genotype were used. The mean density of labeling
of each anatomical structure of interest (three sections/brain) was
expressed in nanocuries/milligram of tissue equivalent according to
reference standards (nCi/mg). The different anatomical structures
analyzed were substantia nigra, striatum, and globus pallidus for
5-HT1B/1D binding sites; and oriens, radiatum, and lacunosum moleculare layers of CA1, granular, and molecular layers of dentate gyrus and
outer and inner layers of parietal cortex for 5-HT1A binding sites.
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RESULTS |
Object exploration
Single-session task
Locomotor activity displayed by WT and 5-HT1B KO mice is shown in
Figure 1A by the mean
distance run in fast movements. The statistical analysis performed on
the data revealed no significant effect of genotype. In contrast,
thigmotaxis differed according to the genotype
(F(1,31) = 7.10; p < 0.02), with 5-HT1B KO mice spending less time at periphery (Fig.
1B). 5-HT1B KO mice differed from WT mice
(F(1,31) = 5.42; p < 0.05)
by their higher exploratory activity toward the object (Fig.
1C).

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Figure 1.
Activity in the open field of wild-type and 5-HT1B
KO mice in the single-session exploration test. A,
Locomotor activity as measured by the mean (±SE) distance run
(centimeters) in fast movements. B, Thigmotaxis as
measured by the mean (±SE) time spent (seconds) at periphery.
C, Object exploratory activity as measured by the mean
(±SE) time spent (seconds) at the object area. *Statistically
significant (wild type vs 5-HT1B KO; p < 0.05).
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Multiple-session task
Locomotor activity. The time course of locomotor
activity during the entire experiment (sessions 1-7) is shown in
Figure 2A. The ANOVA
revealed no significant effect of genotype, but a significant effect of
session (F(6,186) = 32.52;
p < 0.0001), and no effect of the interaction
genotype × session. Habituation of locomotor activity was further
assessed by a significant effect of session in both groups (WT,
F(6,102) = 16.03, p < 0.0001; 5-HT1B KO, F(6,84) = 17.78, p < 0.0001).

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Figure 2.
Time course of locomotor activity and thigmotaxis
in the open field of wild-type and 5-HT1B KO mice during each
successive 6 min session (S1-S7) of the object
exploration paradigm. A, Locomotor activity as measured
by the mean (±SE) distance run (centimeters) in fast movements.
B, Thigmotaxis as measured by the mean (±SE) time spent
(seconds) at periphery.
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Thigmotaxic behavior. WT and 5-HT1B KO mice differed
significantly in thigmotaxis as revealed by the relative time spent at periphery across sessions (Fig. 2B). The statistical
analysis revealed significant genotype
(F(1,31) = 6.91; p < 0.02)
and session (F(6,186) = 12.19;
p < 0.0001) effects, but no significant effect of the
interaction genotype × session. It is interesting to note that
during session 1 (without object), wild-type mice and 5-HT1B KO mice
did not differ significantly in thigmotaxis when the whole session is considered.
Object-oriented exploratory activity. The histograms of
Figure 3A show the average
mean exploratory activity in the areas containing objects and in the
area containing no object during session 2. WT and 5-HT1B KO mice
preferentially displayed a higher level of exploratory activity in the
vicinity of the objects than in the empty area. However, the ANOVA
revealed no significant effect of genotype, a significant effect of
area (F(1,31) = 97.34; p < 0.0001), but no significant genotype × area interaction. The exploratory activity across sessions 2-7 (Fig. 3B) was
observed to be higher in 5-HT1B KO than in WT mice, as revealed by the ANOVA, with a significant effect of genotype
(F(1,31) = 3.97; p = 0.05).
A significant effect of session (F(5,155) = 3.67; p < 0.005) but a lack of significant effect of
the interaction genotype × session were observed.

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Figure 3.
Object-oriented exploratory activity of wild-type
and 5-HT1B KO mice. A, Exploratory activity during
session 2. The histograms represent the mean (±SE) distance run
(centimeters) in slow movements in the areas occupied by objects
(OBJECT AREA) as compared with the same measure recorded
in a reference area (EMPTY AREA). B, Time
course of exploratory activity across sessions
(S2-S7), as measured by the mean (±SE) distance
run (centimeters) in slow movements at object areas. Habituation of
object exploration is shown during sessions 2, 3, and 4 (S2-S4) (B).
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Habituation of object exploration. The level of exploratory
activity progressively decreased from sessions 2 to 4 (sessions without
change) (Fig. 3B, S2, S3,
S4). The ANOVA revealed a significant session effect
(F(2,62) = 4.73; p < 0.02). However, a significant effect of genotype
(F(1,31) = 4.64; p < 0.05)
was observed that can be accounted for by the maintenance in 5-HT1B KO
mice of a higher level of exploratory activity, as compared with WT
mice. A further within-subject analysis revealed a session effect in WT
mice (F(2,34) = 11.02; p < 0.0005) but not in 5-HT1B KO mice. Thus, only WT mice displayed
habituation to object exploratory activity.
Response to spatial change. The displaced object, as well as
the nondisplaced object, did not change the average level of exploratory activity in either WT or 5-HT1B KO mice. The ANOVA showed
no significant effects of genotype, category of object (displaced vs
nondisplaced), and session, or of the various interactions (as for
object × genotype, session × genotype, object × session × genotype). However, this test was characterized by a
high level of variability in individual subject's reactions in both
groups. Ten of 18 WT and 9 of 15 5-HT1B KO mice displayed a selective renewal of exploration toward the displaced object between sessions 4 and 5, but the other mice displayed a lack of systematic reaction or a
decreased exploratory activity.
Response to the new object. The substitution of a new object
for a familiar object (session 7) did not change the exploratory activity toward this novel object between sessions 6 and 7. The ANOVA
revealed no significant effects of genotype, category of object, i.e.,
new versus unchanged, and session. When considering the behavior during
session 7 only, the analysis revealed a significant effect of the
category of object (F(1,31) = 6.17;
p < 0.02), but no effect of genotype or of the
interaction object × genotype. Mice of both genotypes explored
the new object more than the familiar object during session 7. This
tendency, which was not significant in WT mice, approached significance
in 5-HT1B KO mice (F(1,31) = 4.01;
p = 0.06). The same analysis performed for session 6 revealed no significant effect of the category of object, nor of
genotype or of the interaction object × genotype.
Spatial learning in a water maze
Water maze: Experiment I
Visually guided orientation. Both WT and 5-HT1B KO mice
quickly learned to reach the platform in a relatively efficient manner. The ANOVA conducted on the escape latencies revealed no effect of
genotype, a significant effect of trial
(F(3,66) = 10.62; p < 0.0001), and no effect of the interaction genotype × trial, indicating that 5-HT1B KO mice acquired the cued version of the water
maze task in a manner similar to that of the WT mice (Table 1).
Spatial reference memory learning. Acquisition stage (days
2-10). During the first stage of learning, both groups of mice improved their performance as indicated by the decreasing escape latencies across successive days (day effect:
F(8,176) = 20.70; p < 0.0001). However, the escape latency was generally higher in WT than in
5-HT1B KO mice. A significant effect of genotype (F(1,22) = 8.27; p < 0.01)
revealed a difference in performance between the two groups, with
5-HT1B KO mice showing better performances. The ANOVA failed to reveal
any significant effect of the interaction genotype × day. Note
that mice of both genotypes started at the same level of performance
(no significant genotype effect was observed for the first three trials
of day 2).
Transfer stage (days 11-14). The displacement of the
platform induced an increase in the mean escape latency (day 11, first day of transfer) of the same extent in both groups; however, 5-HT1B KO
mice started at a lower level. Both groups of mice acquired the new
goal location (day effect: F(3,66) = 20.07;
p < 0.0001); however, a significant effect of the
genotype (F(1,22) = 11.02; p < 0.005) suggests that again 5-HT1B KO mice were
facilitated. No significant genotype × day interaction was
observed. Again, it was found that during the first two trials of day
11, mice did not differ in performance according to their genotype.
Long-term retention (day 35). After an interruption of 3 weeks, both groups of mice were able to remember the platform location. The ANOVA failed to reveal any significant genotype effect (latency, mean ± SE = 23.25 ± 2.6 sec for WT and = 21.15 ± 3.27 sec for 5-HT1B KO mice).
Water maze: Experiment II
Acquisition stage: escape latencies to the platform.
Figure 4A shows the
learning curves from day 1 to day 10 (D1-D10). Both WT and 5-HT1B KO
mice learned the task and exhibited decreasing escape latency across
days. The ANOVA revealed significant effects of day
(F(9,198) = 34.78; p < 0.0001) and genotype (F(1,22) = 20.72;
p < 0.0005) and a nonsignificant effect of the
interaction genotype × day. These results suggest that both WT
and 5-HT1B KO mice were able to learn the task, but a difference in
performance was found between groups, with 5-HT1B KO mice reaching the
platform faster.

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Figure 4.
Water maze: Experiment II. Performance across days
(D1-D14) during the acquisition stage
(D1-D10) and the transfer stage
(D11-D14) of wild-type and 5-HT1B KO mice.
A, Mean (±SE) latency (seconds) to reach the platform.
B, Mean (±SE) path length (centimeters).
C, Mean (±SE) velocity (centimeters per second).
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Path length. The distance covered by the mice to reach the
platform decreased across days (days 1-10) in both WT and 5-HT1B KO
groups (Fig. 4B). The ANOVA revealed a significant
effect of day (F(9,198) = 45.84;
p < 0.0001). Path lengths of 5-HT1B KO mice were
shorter than those of WT mice. The ANOVA revealed a significant effect
of genotype (F(1,22) = 14.88;
p < 0.001) but no significant interaction
genotype × day.
Velocity. Swimming speed evolved differently across days
depending on the genotype (genotype effect:
F(1,22) = 9.37, p < 0.01; day effect: F(9,198) = 31.78, p < 0.0001; interaction genotype × day,
F(9,198) = 2.62, p < 0.01). Both groups displayed the same swimming speed from day 1 to day
6. Then (days 7-10), although 5-HT1B KO mice kept on a constant speed
(14.5 cm/sec), WT mice decreased their velocity (from an average of 14 cm/sec to 11 cm/sec) at the end of this learning period (Fig.
4C). This change in velocity corresponds to the time the WT
mice improved their performances until reaching the asymptotic
level of performance previously reached by the 5-HT1B KO mice (day 3).
Probe trial on day 10. The withdrawal of the platform
induced a general tendency to swim, preferentially to other equivalent zones, in the quadrant where the platform was previously located (QUADRANT) (Fig. 5A) and in
the platform zone (PLATFORM) (Fig. 5B). In terms of relative
time spent in the four equivalent zones, the ANOVA revealed this
preference displayed by both genotypes (QUADRANT, no significant
genotype effect; significant zone effect, F(3,66) = 133.92, p < 0.0001; PLATFORM, no significant genotype effect; zone effect,
F(3,66) = 46.00, p < 0.0001). Furthermore, the analysis conducted on the crossings onto
PLATFORM again revealed a marked preference in both genotypes (no
significant genotype effect; significant zone effect,
F(3,66) = 54.99, p < 0.0001). Thus at the end of the acquisition period, WT were similar to 5-HT1B KO mice in their ability to remember accurately the location of
the platform.

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Figure 5.
Water maze: Experiment II. Probe trials on days 10 (A, B) and 14 (C, D). Mean (±SE) time
spent (seconds) in the different quadrants (A, C), and
in PLATFORM (B, D) is shown. The schemas
(top) represent the pool (n = North), with the platform location (black
dot). The dashed horizontal line indicates the
random level.
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Transfer stage. Both WT and 5-HT1B KO mice relearned the new
position of the platform, from day 11 to day 14, improving their performance across days (Fig. 4). The ANOVA thus revealed a significant day effect for both escape latencies
(F(3,66) = 33.94; p < 0.0001) and path length (F(3,66) = 35.09;
p < 0.0001). 5-HT1B KO mice again displayed higher
performances [reduced latency and path length as compared with WT
(Fig. 4, A and B, respectively)]. Significant genotype effects were revealed for both the latency
(F(1,22) = 21.76; p = 0.0001) and path length (F(1,22) = 9.57;
p < 0.01) but no significant effects of the
interaction genotype × day. On day 13, WT mice reached the 5-HT1B
KO mice performance level, as evaluated in terms of path length.
Swimming speed (Fig. 4C) differed between genotypes across
days (genotype effect: F(1,22) = 19.17, p < 0.0005; day effect:
F(3,66) = 12.38, p < 0.0001), with a sensitive decrease in WT (from 14 to 11 cm/sec, on
average) and a less marked decrease in 5-HT1B KO mice (mean speed
16-15 cm/sec), respectively (interaction genotype × day:
F(3,66) = 4.21; p < 0.01).
Probe trial on day 14. Both WT and 5-HT1B KO mice
preferentially swam in zones defining the recent location of the
platform as opposed to other equivalent zones: QUADRANT (Fig.
5C), PLATFORM (Fig. 5D). This preference was
displayed similarly by both genotypes (QUADRANT, no significant
genotype effect; significant zone effect, F(3,66) = 121.96; p < 0.0001; no significant genotype × zone interaction; PLATFORM, no
significant genotype effect; significant zone effect, F(3,66) = 29.50; p < 0.0001; no significant genotype × zone interaction). A marked
preference for swimming onto the platform was further assessed by the
analysis of crossings (PLATFORM, genotype effect, F(1,22) = 5.80; p = 0.025;
zone effect, F(3,66) = 50.67;
p < 0.0001; no significant genotype × zone
interaction). Thus at the end of the transfer, WT did not differ from
5-HT1B KO mice in their accurate remembering of the location of the
platform. However, the marginal effect of the genotype observed in this
analysis was found to be caused by a higher activity of 5-HT1B KO.
Spatial working memory learning. Mice from both genotypes,
subjected to four daily trials with the changing of platform location from day to day, improved their performances (latency) from trial 1 to
trial 4 of each day (Fig. 6). The ANOVA
performed on the escape latency revealed a significant effect of trial
(F(3,66) = 40.19; p = 0.0001). 5-HT1B KO mice displayed a sharper learning curve [from a
mean (±SE) = 63.40 ± 4.4 sec (trial 1) to 31.5 ± 3.2 sec (trial 4)], as compared with WT mice [from 69.40 ± 3.6 sec
(trial 1) to 52.4 ± 3.3 sec (trial 4)]. A significant effect of
genotype (F(1,22) = 5.91; p < 0.05) and of the interaction genotype × trial
(F(3,66) = 3.78; p < 0.02)
suggests that this improvement was higher in 5-HT1B KO mice than in WT.
The analysis did not reveal any significant effect of day and of the
interaction genotype × day, which suggests that the improvement
was independent from one day to another. However, when path length was
considered, the ANOVA revealed no significant effect of genotype, but
did reveal significant effects of trial
(F(3,66) = 28.56; p = 0.0001) and of the interaction genotype × trial
(F(3,66) = 5.1; p < 0.005).

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Figure 6.
Spatial working memory performance of wild-type
and 5-HT1B KO mice. Shown are performances across trials
(T1-T4) as measured by the mean (±SE) latency
(seconds) to reach the platform. *Statistically significant
(p = 0.0002).
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Spontaneous alternation
The exploratory activities displayed by WT and 5-HT1B KO mice in
the Y-maze did not show any preference bias in the frequency of visits
to the different arms; however, 5-HT1B KO mice displayed higher levels
of locomotor activity than WT mice. The ANOVA conducted on the number
of entries in the arms thus revealed a lack of significant effect of
the arm but a significant effect of the genotype
(F(1,22) = 15.28; p < 0.001) and a nonsignificant genotype × arm interaction. Spontaneous alternation was equally displayed by mice of both genotypes. The ANOVA revealed a lack of significant genotype effect for
both simple and second order alternations. Simple alternations represented 96% of the pattern of WT mice and 97% of those of 5-HT1B
KO mice. Mice did not display strong side preferences. The ANOVA
revealed no significant effects of genotype but a significant effect of
the interaction genotype × side
(F(1,22) = 11.02; p < 0.005), which reveals a weak but opposite side preference between WT
(60% right) and 5-HT1B KO mice (57% left).
Elevated plus maze
The ANOVA conducted on the number of entries in the open and
closed arms did not reveal any significant effect of genotype. This
result suggests that locomotor/exploratory activity was identical in
both groups of mice in this apparatus.
The ANOVA conducted on the index of anxiety did not reveal any
significant effect of genotype. Thus anxiety levels were found to be
similar in WT and 5-HT1B KO mice as assessed in the elevated plus maze.
Fear conditioning
Training
Time spent freezing increased across blocks during training (first
session) in both WT and 5-HT1B KO mice, with a minimum during the first
2 min block, i.e., before the onset of the tone + shock (mean ± SE = 8.46 ± 1.5 sec for WT, and = 6.6 ± 0.9 sec for 5-HT1B KO mice). After the first (second block) and then the second
(third block) presentation of the tone + shock pairing, freezing
gradually reached elevated values as shown in Figure 7A. The ANOVA revealed a
significant effect of block (F(2,24) = 79.14; p < 0.0001) but no significant effects of
genotype or of the interaction genotype × block.

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Figure 7.
Contextual fear conditioning in wild-type and
5-HT1B KO mice. Shown are mean (±SE) duration (seconds) of freezing on
successive 2 min blocks (0-2, 2-4, 4-6) during
training (A), at reexposure to the context
(B), and in response to the auditory cue in a new
context (C).
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Context test
When brought back in the previous context 24 hr after training
(second session), mice exhibited high levels of freezing, which increased from block 1 to block 2, suggesting that they remembered the
context where they received the electric shock the day before (Fig.
7B). The ANOVA revealed a significant effect of block
(F(2,24) = 3.86; p < 0.05)
but no significant effect of genotype or of the interaction
genotype × block. Both groups of mice froze in a similar manner,
beginning during the first 0-2 min block, when they were placed back
in the conditioning chamber.
Auditory cue test
When placed in a new context (third session), mice displayed an
increase in freezing at the onset of the tone (second block) (Fig.
7C). The ANOVA revealed a significant effect of block
(F(2,24) = 20.98; p < 0.0001), but no significant effect of genotype or of the interaction
genotype × block. In the new context, WT and 5-HT1B KO mice froze
equally at the presentation of the tone, which had been associated
previously with the electric shock.
The entire experiment did not enable us to detect any differences
between WT and 5-HT1B KO mice in the emotional response induced by fear
conditioning. Only a marginally significant effect of the genotype was
observed when comparing freezing responses limited to the first block
(0-2 min) of the successive three sessions of the experiment
(training, old context, new context)
(F(1,12) = 4.22; p = 0.06),
associated with a significant session effect (F(2,24) = 40.94; p < 0.0001), but no significant genotype × session interaction.
Further punctual analyses indicate that this slight difference in
genotype might be limited only to the auditory cue test (third
session), during which WT mice displayed a tendency to freeze more than
5-HT1B KO mice (F(1,12) = 4.10;
p = 0.06), but nonsignificant genotype differences were
observed during both training and context sessions.
Locomotor activity
Locomotor activity as assessed in activity cages decreased
regularly over time (5 min blocks/60 min test) in both WT and 5-HT1B KO
mice (Fig. 8A). The
ANOVA revealed no significant effect of genotype, a significant effect
of block (F(11,242) = 23.37;
p < 0.0001), and no significant effect of the
interaction genotype × block. Moreover, the effect of a systemic
treatment by the RU 24969 on locomotor activity selectively affected WT
but not 5-HT1B KO mice (Fig. 8B). After injection, WT
mice displayed a dramatic and progressive increase in activity that
persisted for at least 2 hr, whereas 5-HT1B KO mice did not show any
change from their previous asymptotic level of activity. The ANOVA
conducted on the raw data (30 min blocks/180 min test) revealed
significant effects of genotype (F(1,22) = 5.69; p < 0.05), of block
(F(5,110) = 4.42; p = 0.001), and of the interaction genotype × block
(F(5,110) = 9.42; p < 0.0001).

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Figure 8.
Locomotor activity in wild-type and 5-HT1B KO
mice. A, Mean (±SE) activity units on successive 5 min
blocks across the 60 min test period. B, Mean (±SE)
activity units on successive 30 min blocks across the 180 min test
period. The arrow indicates the time of injection by RU
24969 (5 mg/kg, i.p.).
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Receptor autoradiography
The anatomical localization of 5-HT1B/1D binding sites is shown in
Figure 9 on brain sections of WT and
5-HT1B KO mice. With 0.3 nM
S-CM-G[125I]TNH2 alone, a high density of labeling
is observed in the WT (Fig. 9A), especially in the
substantia nigra, the dorsal subiculum, and the superior colliculus,
whereas a low density is observed in the substantia nigra of the 5-HT1B
KO mouse (Fig. 9B), which corresponds to 18% of the
labeling of the same structure in WT [WT = 0.630 nCi/mg, 5-HT1B
KO = 0.115 nCi/mg, (F(1,20) = 222.74; p < 0.001)]. The level of 5-HT1D sites was assessed
by addition of 10 6 M CP 93129 to the
incubation medium, which selectively masks 5-HT1B sites. The density of
5-HT1D sites does not differ between genotypes (Fig. 9C,D),
whatever the anatomical structure considered: substantia nigra (WT = 0.096 nCi/mg, 5-HT1B KO = 0.087 nCi/mg); globus pallidus
(WT = 0.089 nCi/mg, 5-HT1B KO = 0.086 nCi/mg); striatum
(WT = 0.067 nCi/mg, 5-HT1B KO = 0.069 nCi/mg). The addition of 10 5 M 8-OH-DPAT to the incubation
medium did not change the level of labeling in the WT (Fig.
9E) caused by the presence of 5-HT1B sites, but resulted in
the disappearance of the labeling in the 5-HT1B KO mice (Fig.
9F). Treatment with 10 7
M 8-OH-DPAT does not modify the labeling in either genotype
(data not shown). There was no significant effect of the genotype on the density of 5-HT1A binding sites and no significant effect of the
interaction genotype × anatomical structure, but a significant effect of the anatomical structure (F(1,6) = 15.10; p < 0.001), with the highest labeling in the
radiatum layer of CA1 (WT = 13.47 nCi/mg, 5-HT1B KO = 12.86 nCi/mg) and the lowest density in the outer layer of parietal cortex
(WT = 3.36nCi/mg, 5-HT1B KO = 3.15 nCi/mg).

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Figure 9.
Receptor autoradiography on brain sections of
wild-type (A, C, E) and 5-HT1B KO (B, D,
F) 129/Sv mice. 5-HT1B/1D binding sites: 10-µm-thick
brain sections were incubated with 0.3 nM
S-CM-G[125I]TNH2 alone (A, B).
C, D, 5-HT1D binding sites as revealed in presence of
10 6 M CP 93129 (masking 5-HT1B binding
sites). E, F, 5-HT1B binding sites as revealed in the
presence of 10 5 M 8-OH-DPAT (masking
5-HT1D binding sites). The nonspecific binding results in the same
level of labeling as given in F. CA1,
Subfield 1 of Ammon's horn; DS, dorsal subiculum;
SC, superior colliculus; SN, substantia
nigra.
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DISCUSSION |
The main finding of this study is that the deletion of a single
gene coding for a particular 5-HT receptor, the 5-HT1B, is associated
with facilitation of learning abilities, without affecting general
emotional state or locomotor abilities.
WT and 5-HT1B KO mice differed in locomotor/exploratory activity only
when the environment was relatively "rich" given its internal
structure (Y-maze) or the addition of inner variety (objects in the
open field). The activity cages and the elevated plus maze did not
reveal any locomotor differences as a function of genotype. The lack of
genotype differences in freezing during the first 2 min of the training
session of fear conditioning suggests a lack of change in the basic
activity level recorded in this "poor" environment. It may also be
possible that this environment-dependent genotype difference in
exploration may be attributable to the sequence of testing the mice,
which started as naive in the stressful water maze task and were
subsequently submitted to free-exploration tests (Y-maze, elevated plus
maze). However, we replicated these tests with naive animals and
obtained quite similar results (M.-C. Buhot, unpublished observation).
From the object exploration task performed by naive mice we observed
that 5-HT1B KO mice displayed no differences in locomotor activity as
compared with WT mice, a result consistent with our previous
observations (Saudou et al., 1994 ), but the present study also showed
that WT and 5-HT1B KO mice did not differ in exploratory strategy
(spontaneous alternation), i.e., if we consider more qualitative
aspects of exploratory behavior.
In a previous study, we observed that the 5-HT1B agonist CP-93129
injected into the dorsal hippocampus decreased locomotor activity in
the open field immediately after the first contact of the rat with the
new environment and induced neophobic reaction in the presence of a new
object replacing a familiar one (Buhot and Naïli, 1995 ). This
finding is relevant to the possible anxiogenic action of 5-HT1B
receptor agonists, and to the role played by the hippocampus in
emotional states (Gray, 1984 ; LeDoux, 1993 ). In the open field
containing one object or several objects, 5-HT1B KO mice displayed
elevated exploratory activity associated with a decrease in thigmotaxis
without elevation of locomotor activity. However, it was observed that
in the absence of objects (session 1 of the multiple-session
exploration study), WT and 5-HT1B KO mice did not differ significantly
in thigmotaxis. It is thus not certain that thigmotaxis in the presence
of objects directly reveals a higher level of anxiety. Furthermore, we
confirmed that 5-HT1B KO mice do not differ from WT in anxiety
measured, in the present study, in the elevated plus maze, as observed
previously using another model of anxiety, i.e., the light/dark choice
test (Ramboz et al., 1996 ). This dissociation between locomotor and
more cognitive components of the mouse's behavior suggests that
"shyness," a characteristic of 129/Sv mice, is reduced in 5-HT1B KO
mice, which respond more positively to novelty.
The higher and sustained level of exploratory activity found in 5-HT1B
KO mice could reveal a lack of behavioral inhibition, which may
indicate the presence of some aspect of impulsive behavior. However, if
the 5-HT1B KO mice display impulsive behavior in a social context
(aggression toward male intruders) (Saudou et al., 1994 ), they do not
clearly exhibit impulsive reactions in food-reinforced instrumental
learning (Brunner and Hen, 1997 ), but they develop a higher tendency
toward alcohol consumption than WT (Crabbe et al., 1996 ) and are more
motivated to self-administer cocaine (Rocha et al., 1998 ).
The high level of reactivity to the environment displayed by the 5-HT1B
KO mice suggests a pattern of behavior similar to the syndrome of
"overattention" found in schizophrenia, a disorder possibly linked
to serotonin dysfunction, with 5-HT1A and 1B receptors involved as
possible major mediating targets (Gray et al., 1991 ; Cassaday et al.,
1993 ). However, 5-HT1B KO mice display an increased pattern of prepulse
inhibition, which may reveal elevated attentional capacities, at least
at the sensorimotor level (Dulawa et al., 1997 ). This attentional
component cannot be neglected in the analysis of learning and memory
abilities of 5-HT1B KO mice.
The lack of exploratory habituation found in 5-HT1B KO mice might
reveal a type of memory impairment that is frequently revealed as a
consequence of hippocampal dysfunctioning but cannot by itself explain
the lack of reaction to a spatial change (Thinus-Blanc et al., 1991 ;
Save et al., 1992b ). Neither WT nor 5-HT1B KO mice reacted to spatial
change, which might be attributable to their reputation as poor
cognitive subjects (Gerlai, 1996 ).
The water maze task was thus expected to critically elucidate major
points regarding direct learning and memory abilities of the 5-HT1B KO
mice. A first experiment using a spatial reference memory procedure
showed that 5-HT1B KO mice acquired the task faster than WT mice.
However, this difference in performance was selectively related to
spatial memory, because WT and 5-HT1B KO mice did not differ in the cue
version of the task.
The second experiment highlighted the fact that the better performance
of the 5-HT1B KO mice was not simply attributable to a higher swimming
speed. Shorter path lengths in 5-HT1B KO mice clearly assessed better
orientation accuracy in comparison with WT mice, especially during
acquisition. WT mice, however, improved their performance over time and
at the same time decreased their velocity. This behavior,
interestingly, might reflect a form of hesitation [vicarious trial and
error (Tolman, 1939 )], which corresponds to a "mental"
reorganization found to be associated with the achievement of learning
(Teule et al., 1972 ; Amsel, 1993 ). During the transfer stage, 5-HT1B KO
mice again appeared to be facilitated: they relearned the new location
of the platform faster than WT, which may be interpreted as better
cognitive flexibility. This flexibility requires that the animal does
not perseverate in choosing a wrong solution (i.e., the one that was
previously correct but is no longer appropriate) and thus reorganizes
its behavior to solve the new spatial problem. The underlying
mechanisms allowing such adaptive behavior belong to a behavioral
inhibition system, the functions of which are shared, in particular, by
the serotonin system and the hippocampal formation (Gray, 1984 ). This
is a second argument showing that mice, which display impulsivity in a
social context, are nevertheless able to develop normal (even
facilitated) behavioral inhibition in a cognitive context. The probe
trials assessed the achievement of learning in mice of both genotypes through their accuracy in searching the previous location of the platform. In the working/short-term memory version of the water maze
task, 5-HT1B KO and WT mice improved their performance across trials,
which suggests that they do not differ in their short-term memory
capacities. Spontaneous alternation was also equally displayed by mice
of both genotypes, thus revealing identical and efficient working
memory abilities.
The performances in contextual fear conditioning did not reveal any
difference between 5-HT1B KO and WT mice, which is surprising because
this task is considered to be hippocampal dependent, as is the water
maze task. However, the cognitive demand of each of these tasks can be
considered to be different. The 5-HT1B KO mice displayed better
performance than WT mice on the more cognitively demanding task (water
maze), but no differences between genotypes were observed on the less
demanding (contextual fear conditioning) task, as is also the case for
other systems involved in hippocampal-dependent memory (Bach et al.,
1995 ). It thus becomes possible that the 5-HT1B receptor plays a
particular role in behaviors that involve a high cognitive demand
(Buhot, 1997 ). The inactivation of 5-HT1B receptors might facilitate
learning (Meneses et al., 1997 ), and 5-HT1B antagonists might reveal
antiamnesic properties (Buhot, 1997 ). This may be the result of various
neurobiological mechanisms taking place in particular cerebral
structures involved in learning and memory. The blockade of 5-HT1B
receptors located on medial septal cholinergic terminals might
facilitate cholinergic transmission to the hippocampus, and thus the
acquisition stage of spatial learning. In the same way, the blockade of
5-HT1B receptors located on glutamatergic CA1-subiculum terminals
might facilitate the transfer of processed information from the
hippocampus to cortical areas and thus might participate in memory
storage mechanisms (Aït Amara et al., 1995 ).
To summarize, the absence of 5-HT1B receptors does not result in the
occurrence or absence of a particular behavior but in the level of its
expression. This is true for "spontaneous" behavior, inasmuch as
the environment solicits sustained exploration, but also for those
behaviors involved in memory and complex associative learning. The
deletion of the 5-HT1B receptor, associated with appropriate behavioral
paradigms, allows the dissociation of anxiety from response to novelty,
and perseverative behaviors [drug addiction (Rocha et al., 1998 ),
social aggression (Saudou et al., 1994 ), lack of habituation] from
adaptive behavioral inhibition underlying learning mechanisms that
facilitate cognitive flexibility.
Autoradiographic analyses showed that brains of 5-HT1B KO mice, as
expected, do not express 5-HT1B binding sites. The level of 5-HT1D
sites is unchanged in the 5-HT1B KO (18% of 5-HT1B+1D sites), showing
no apparent plasticity of this receptor type, which is genetically,
pharmacologically, and anatomically well related to the 5-HT1B
receptor. The 5-HT1A receptor is the more abundant of the 5-HT
receptors in the hippocampus, and its distribution in all layers of
this structure suggests possible plasticity of this site in the absence
of 5-HT1B receptors. Our analyses showed no difference in 5-HT1A
binding site density between WT and 5-HT1B KO mice. This does not
preclude a modification of the sensitivity of the receptor. Other
candidates to adapt the behavior to the absence of the 5-HT1B would be
the receptors of the neurotransmitters present in the circuitry where
the receptor protein of the deleted gene is normally present, i.e.,
glutamate in the CA1-dorsal subiculum and acetylcholine in the
septohippocampal pathway, as is the case for some dopamine receptors in
the nigrostriatal loop (Rocha et al., 1998 ).
To avoid these possible developmental plasticities, recent targeting
techniques allow the production of inducible mice for which the
expression of a specific gene can be regulated in time (starting in
adulthood, for example) and space (anatomically) (Stark et al., 1998 ).
Under these new conditions, it will soon become possible to more
directly "target" the different functions of the 5-HT1B receptor.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 25, 1999; revised April 19, 1999; accepted May 3, 1999.
This research was supported by the Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, Université de Bordeaux 1, and partly by the
European Commission (Biotechnology Program, Bio2CT-CT93-0179) and a
NATO grant (CRG940753). We thank Dr. T. P. Durkin for linguistic corrections of this manuscript and helpful discussions, M. Chaigniau for illustrations, the Laboratory of Transgenose (Pr. J.-Y. Daniel, Dr.
P. Costet) and D. Panzeri for their help in animal breeding and care,
T. Lafon, C. Maubaret, G. Creste, and L. Gautron for their technical
assistance in behavioral experiments, and Dr. J. Chauveau
(Immunotech, Marseille, France) for the generous gift of
S-CM-G[125I]TNH2.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. M.-C. Buhot, Laboratoire de
Neurosciences Comportementales et Cognitives, Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique, Unité Mixte de Recherche 5807, Avenue des
Facultés, 33405 Talence cedex, France.
 |
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