Literature DB >> 24190333

The antidepressant fluoxetine mobilizes vesicles to the recycling pool of rat hippocampal synapses during high activity.

Jasmin Jung1, Kristina Loy, Eva-Maria Schilling, Mareike Röther, Jan M Brauner, Tobias Huth, Ursula Schlötzer-Schrehardt, Christian Alzheimer, Johannes Kornhuber, Oliver Welzel, Teja W Groemer.   

Abstract

Effects of the antidepressant fluoxetine in therapeutic concentration on stimulation-dependent synaptic vesicle recycling were examined in cultured rat hippocampal neurons using fluorescence microscopy. Short-term administration of fluoxetine neither inhibited exocytosis nor endocytosis of RRP vesicular membranes. On the contrary, acute application of the drug markedly increased the size of the recycling pool of hippocampal synapses. This increase in recycling pool size was corroborated using the styryl dye FM 1-43, antibody staining with αSyt1-CypHer™5E and overexpression of synapto-pHluorin, and was accompanied by an increase in the frequency of miniature postsynaptic currents. Analysis of axonal transport and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching excluded vesicles originating from the synapse-spanning superpool as a source, indicating that these new release-competent vesicles derived from the resting pool. Super resolution microscopy and ultrastructural analysis by electron microscopy revealed that short-term incubation with fluoxetine had no influence on the number of active synapses and synaptic morphology compared to controls. These observations support the idea that therapeutic concentrations of fluoxetine enhance the recycling vesicle pool size and thus the recovery of neurotransmission from exhausting stimuli. The change in the recycling pool size is consistent with the plasticity hypothesis of the pathogenesis of major depressive disorder as stabilization of the vesicle recycling might be responsible for neural outgrowth and plasticity.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24190333     DOI: 10.1007/s12035-013-8569-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Neurobiol        ISSN: 0893-7648            Impact factor:   5.590


  94 in total

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