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Depression
Public
release date: 7-Aug-2003
Contact: Jules Asher NIMH press@nih.gov 301-443-4536
NIH/National Institute of Mental Health
Creation of new neurons critical to antidepressant action
in mice.
Blocking the formation of neurons in the hippocampus blocks
the behavioral effects of antidepressants in mice, say researchers
funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Their
finding lends new credence to the proposed role of such
neurogenesis in lifting mood. It also helps to explain why
antidepressants typically take a few weeks to work, note
Rene Hen, Ph.D., Columbia University, and colleagues, who
report on their study in the August 8th Science.
"If antidepressants work by stimulating the production
of new neurons, there's a built-in delay," explained
Hen, a grantee of NIH's National Institute of Mental Health
(NIMH) and National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). "Stem
cells must divide, differentiate, migrate and establish
connections with post-synaptic targets - a process that
takes a few weeks."
"This is an important new insight into how antidepressants
work," added NIMH director Thomas Insel, M.D. "We
have known that antidepressants influence the birth of neurons
in the hippocampus. Now it appears that this effect may
be important for the clinical response."
Chronic stress, anxiety and depression have been linked
to atrophy or loss of hippocampal neurons. A few years ago,
Hen's colleague and co-author Ronald Duman, Ph.D., Yale
University, reported that some antidepressants promote hippocampal
neurogenesis. But to what effect? To begin to demonstrate
a causal relationship between these newly generated cells
and relief from depression, researchers would have to find
a way to prevent their formation in a behaving animal.
The researchers first showed that mice become less anxious
- they begin eating sooner in a novel environment - after
four weeks of antidepressant treatment, but not after just
5 days of such treatment. Paralleling the delay in onset
of antidepressant efficacy in humans, the chronically-treated
mice, but not the briefly-treated ones, showed a 60 percent
boost in a telltale marker of neurogenesis in a key area
of the hippocampus.
To find out if the observed neurogenesis is involved in
antidepressants' mechanism-of -action, Hen and colleagues
selectively targeted the hippocampus with x-rays to kill
proliferating cells. This reduced neurogenesis by 85 percent.
Antidepressants had no effect on anxiety and depression-related
behaviors in the irradiated mice. For example, fluoxetine
failed to improve grooming behavior, as it normally does,
in animals whose behavior had deteriorated following chronic
unpredictable stress. Evidence suggested that this could
not be attributed to other effects of x-rays. Neurons communicate
with each other by secreting messenger chemicals, or neurotransmitters,
such as serotonin, which cross the synaptic gulf between
cells and bind to receptors on neighboring cell membranes.
Medications that enhance such binding of serotonin to its
receptors (serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs)
are widely prescribed to treat anxiety and depression, suggesting
that these receptors play an important role in
regulating emotions.
By knocking out the gene that codes for a key subtype of
serotonin receptor (5-HT1A), the researchers created a strain
of "knockout" mice that as adults show anxiety-related
traits, such as a reluctance to begin eating in a novel
environment. While unaffected by chronic treatment with
the SSRI fluoxetine, the knockout mice became less anxious
after chronic treatment with tricyclic antidepressants,
which act via another neurotransmitter, norepinephrine,
suggesting an independent molecular pathway.
While chronic fluoxetine treatment doubled the number of
new hippocampal neurons in normal mice, it had no effect
in the knockout mice. The tricyclic imipramine boosted neurogenesis
in both types of mice, indicating that the serotonin 1A
receptor is required for neurogenesis induced by fluoxetine,
but not imipramine. Chronic treatment with a serotonin 1A-selective
drug confirmed that activating the serotonin 1A receptor
is sufficient to spur cell proliferation.
Although the new findings strengthen the case that neurogenesis
contributes to the effects of antidepressants, Hen cautions
that ultimate proof may require a "cleaner" method
of suppressing this process, such as transgenic techniques
that will more precisely target toxins at the hippocampal
circuits involved.
"Our results suggest that strategies aimed at stimulating
hippocampal neurogenesis could provide novel avenues for
the treatment of anxiety and depressive disorders,"
suggest the researchers.
Also participating in the study were: Luca Santarelli, Michael
Saxe, Cornelius Gross, Stephanie Dulawa, Noelia Weisstaub,
James Lee, Columbia University; Alexandre Surget, Catherine
Belzung, Universite de Tours, France; Fortunato Battaglia,
Ottavio Arancio, New York University.
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In addition to NIMH and NIDA, the research was also supported
by the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and
Depression (NARSAD).
NIMH and NIDA are part of the National Institutes of Health
(NIH), the Federal Government's primary agency for biomedical
and behavioral research. NIH is a component of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-08/niom-con080403.php
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