Behavioral evaluation of transgenic mice with CNS expression of IFN-alpha by elevated plus-maze and Porsolt swim test. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Chronic IFN-alpha treatment as an antiviral or anti-cancer therapy can lead to severe psychiatric complications, including depression and anxiety in patients. In many animal models of IFN-alpha-induced behavioral dysfunction, the opposite results have frequently been reported. In an attempt to overcome the limitation of pharmacological studies, IFN-alpha-transgenic mice with CNS-targeted expression of the IFN-alpha transgene were used to study depression and anxiety-like behaviors by Porsolt swim and elevated plus-maze assays, respectively. Interestingly, chronic stimulation of IFN-alpha signaling in mouse brains did not cause depression or anxiety as measured by these tests in comparison with wild-type littermates. This observation suggests that factors other than IFN-alpha may be necessary for the development of psychiatric complications following IFN-alpha therapy in patients.

published proceedings

  • Neurosci Lett

author list (cited authors)

  • Zhang, H., Tian, Z., & Wang, J.

citation count

  • 1

publication date

  • August 2010