| First Author | Shaldubina A | Year | 2007 |
| Journal | Genes Brain Behav | Volume | 6 |
| Issue | 3 | Pages | 253-9 |
| PubMed ID | 16848785 | Mgi Jnum | J:135100 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:3790372 | Doi | 10.1111/j.1601-183X.2006.00253.x |
| Citation | Shaldubina A, et al. (2007) Behavioural phenotyping of sodium-myo-inositol cotransporter heterozygous knockout mice with reduced brain inositol. Genes Brain Behav 6(3):253-9 |
| abstractText | Inositol plays a key role in dopamine, serotonin, noradrenaline and acetylcholine neurotransmission, and inositol treatment is reported to have beneficial effects in depression and anxiety. Therefore, a reduction in brain intracellular inositol levels could be a cause of some psychiatric disorders, such as depression or anxiety. To determine the behavioural consequences of inositol depletion, we studied the behaviour of sodium-dependent myo-inositol cotransporter-1 heterozygous knockout mice. In heterozygous mice, free inositol levels were reduced by 15% in the frontal cortex and by 25% in the hippocampus, but they did not differ from their wild-type littermates in cholinergic-mediated lithium-pilocarpine seizures, in the apomorphine-induced stereotypic climbing model of dopaminergic system function, in the Porsolt forced-swimming test model of depression, in amphetamine-induced hyperactivity, or in the elevated plus-maze model of anxiety. Reduction of brain inositol by more than 25% may be required to elicit neurobehavioural effects. |