被盖腹侧区
伏隔核
神经科学
前额叶皮质
海马体
社会失败
多巴胺能
PI3K/AKT/mTOR通路
心理学
多巴胺
医学
生物
信号转导
细胞生物学
认知
作者
Eric M. Parise,Lyonna F. Parise,Omar K. Sial,Astrid M. Cardona-Acosta,Trevonn Gyles,Barbara Juarez,Dipesh Chaudhury,Ming‐Hu Han,Eric J. Nestler,Carlos A. Bolaños-Guzmán
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.05.002
摘要
Abstract
Background
Major depressive disorder is prevalent in children and adolescents and is associated with a high degree of morbidity throughout life, with potentially devastating personal consequences and public health impact. The efficacy of ketamine (KET) as an antidepressant has been demonstrated in adolescent rodents; however, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. Recent evidence showed that KET reverses stress-induced (i.e., depressive-like) deficits within major mesocorticolimbic regions, such as the prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens (NAc), and hippocampus, in adult rodents. However, little is known about KET's effect in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), which provides the majority of dopaminergic input to these brain regions. Methods
We characterized behavioral, biochemical, and electrophysiological effects produced by KET treatment in C57BL/6J male mice during adolescence (n = 7–10 per condition) within the VTA and its major projection regions, namely, the NAc and prefrontal cortex. Subsequently, molecular targets within the VTA-NAc projection were identified for viral gene transfer manipulations to recapitulate the effects of stress or KET treatment. Results
Repeated KET treatment produced a robust proresilient response to chronic social defeat stress. This effect was largely driven by Akt signaling activity within the VTA and NAc, and it could be blocked or recapitulated through direct Akt-viral–mediated manipulation. Additionally, we found that the KET-induced resilient phenotype is dependent on VTA-NAc, but not VTA–prefrontal cortex, pathway activity. Conclusions
These findings indicate that KET exposure during adolescence produces a proresilient phenotype mediated by changes in Akt intracellular signaling and altered neuronal activity within the VTA-NAc pathway.
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