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Behavioural Brain Research 2006-Aug

Behavioral characterization of CD26 deficient mice in animal tests of anxiety and antidepressant-like activity.

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Malika El Yacoubi
Jean-Marie Vaugeois
Didier Marguet
Nicole Sauze
Régis Guieu
Jean Costentin
Emmanuel Fenouillet

Keywords

Abstract

CD26 exhibits a dipeptidylpeptidase-IV function (DPPIV) which regulates neuropeptide activity by N-terminal processing. Because abnormal plasma DPPIV was associated in mammals with behavioral changes, we examined the behavior of CD26-/- mice resulting from targeted inactivation of the gene. These animals had a decreased immobility in the forced swim and tail suspension tests, indicating a reduced depression-like behavior. We addressed some factors that could affect these results. No major differences between mutants and controls were observed in the black/white box test that investigates anxiety. In the hole-board apparatus that explores both curiosity and anxiety, CD26-/- mice of both genders made significantly more head dips than controls. In a motor activity test, mutants displayed higher horizontal and vertical activities i.e. increased novelty-induced behavioral activation. We conclude that DPPIV inactivation in mice broadly leads to an antidepressant-like and hyperactive phenotype.

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