| Literature DB >> 24409146 |
Caroline A Browne1, Irwin Lucki2.
Abstract
Newer antidepressants are needed for the many individuals with major depressive disorder (MDD) that do not respond adequately to treatment and because of a delay of weeks before the emergence of therapeutic effects. Recent evidence from clinical trials shows that the NMDA antagonist ketamine is a revolutionary novel antidepressant because it acts rapidly and is effective for treatment-resistant patients. A single infusion of ketamine alleviates depressive symptoms in treatment-resistant depressed patients within hours and these effects may be sustained for up to 2 weeks. Although the discovery of ketamine's effects has reshaped drug discovery for antidepressants, the psychotomimetic properties of this compound limit the use of this therapy to the most severely ill patients. In order to develop additional antidepressants like ketamine, adequate preclinical behavioral screening paradigms for fast-acting antidepressants need to be established and used to identify the underlying neural mechanisms. This review examines the preclinical literature attempting to model the antidepressant-like effects of ketamine. Acute administration of ketamine has produced effects in behavioral screens for antidepressants like the forced swim test, novelty suppression of feeding and in rodent models for depression. Protracted behavioral effects of ketamine have been reported to appear after a single treatment that last for days. This temporal pattern is similar to its clinical effects and may serve as a new animal paradigm for rapid antidepressant effects in humans. In addition, protracted changes in molecules mediating synaptic plasticity have been implicated in mediating the antidepressant-like behavioral effects of ketamine. Current preclinical studies are examining compounds with more specific pharmacological effects at glutamate receptors and synapses in order to develop additional rapidly acting antidepressants without the hallucinogenic side effects or abuse potential of ketamine.Entities:
Keywords: BDNF; animal models; antidepressants; depression; ketamine
Year: 2013 PMID: 24409146 PMCID: PMC3873522 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2013.00161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Acute effects of ketamine.
| Burgdorf et al., | Male adult (2–3 months) Sprague-Dawley rats | Fort Dodge (Butler, USA), I.V., I.P., and S.C. 10 mg/kg | Reduced immobility in FST 20–60 min and 24 h post i.p. Injection (10 mg/kg). Reduced latency to feed in the NIH 1 h post 10 mg/kg i.v. | Increased NR2B and GluR1 expression in the mPFC and HC 24 h post-injection |
| Carrier and Kabbaj, | Male (250–270 g) and female (200–225 g) Sprague-Dawley rats | Fort Dodge (Butler Schein), Inc. 2.5–0 mg/kg | Latency to feed was reduced in the NSF 24 h post-injection (5 and 10 mg/kg). Increased sucrose consumption of males 48 h post-injection in the SPT. Reduced immobility in FST in males & females 30 min post-injection | Increased mTOR phosphorylation in males and females, reduced eEF2 phosphorylation in males (5 mg/kg) |
| Gigliucci et al., | Male (280–320 g) Sprague- Dawley rats | Vetoquinol Ltd., UK (1.0 mg/ml). 10–25 mg/kg i.p. | Rats exhibited antidepressant-like effects in the FST at 1 or 24 h after a single injection of ketamine. Ketamine was ineffective following 3 injections (24, 5 and 1 h prior to testing). Ketamine (25 mg/kg) reversed stress-induced immobility; this was prevented by | Depletion of cortical serotonin levels by |
| Koike et al., | Male Sprague-Dawley rats (185–325 g at testing) | Ketalar® Sankyo Yell Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., 1–10 mg/kg i.p. | Ketamine (10 mg/kg) decreased immobility 30 min post-treatment in rats exposed to 21 days of corticosterone administration | N/A |
| Koike et al., | Male ICR (5 weeks) and male C57BL/6j (9 weeks) | Ketalar® Sankyo Yell Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. 30 mg/kg i.p. | Ketamine decreased immobility in the FST & latency to feed in the NSF at 30 min and 24 h post-injection. K252a prevented ketamine's effects at 24 h. | N/A |
| Muller et al., | Male Sprague Dawley rats (330–400 g) | Fort-Dodge (Pfizer CT), USA. 15 mg/kg (i.p.) | Reduced immobility in FST 2 h post-injection | Increased p-αCamKII and decreased SNARE complex expression 1– 4 h post-injection. No effect on GSK-3 activity. Protracted increased in synapsin expression1 h to 7 days post-injection |
| Walker et al., | CD-1 mice (6 wks. old) and C57BL/6J mice (12 weeks old) | Fort Dodge Animal Health 6 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine co-administered with LPS but not pretreatment 24 h prior blocked LPS-induced immobility in FST and anhedonia in the SPT. 10 h post LPS, ketamine administration reversed the anhedonia in SPT, this was blocked by NBQX | Ketamine did not block the LPS-induced increases in kynurenine metabolites, cytokines or BDNF expression at 6–28 h |
| Iijima et al., | C57Bl/6J mice (9 weeks) | Sigma-Aldrich 30 mg/kg (i.p.) | Latency to feed in the NSF was reduced at 30 min and 24 h post-injection. Rapamycin reversed the 24 h reduction in NSF latency | N/A |
| Liu et al., | BDNF knockin mice, (Val66Met SNP) Val/Met, Met/Met and Val/Val (WT) 6–8 months | Hospira Inc. 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | 24 h post-injection the AD effects of ketamine in the FST were blocked in Met/Met mice | Met/Met knockin mice are insensitive to the molecular effects of ketamine on spine head diameter and spine length modulated in WT mice |
| Yang et al., | Male Wistar rats (180–220 g) | Gutian Pharmaceutical CO. Ltd., Fuijan, China 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Reduced immobility in FST 30 min post-injection | Increased mTOR phosphorylation in HC and PFC |
| Yang et al., | Male Wistar rats (200–300 g) | Gutian Pharmaceutical CO. Ltd., Fuijan, China 5–15 mg/kg (i.p.) | Dose-dependent reduction in immobility in the FST 30 min post-injection | Increased BDNF levels in the HC following 10 and 15 mg/kg. Dose dependent increase in phosphorylated mTOR levels in HC |
| Wang et al., | Male Wistar rats (60 days old) | Sigma-Aldrich 15 mg/kg (i.p.) | Decreased immobility in the FST 60 min post-injection | Increased BDNF expression and decreased phosphorylation of GluR1 (Ser845) in HC 60 min post-injection |
| Beurel et al., | WT and GSK-3 Knock in mice | 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | AD effects in LH in WT but not GSK-3 knock-in mice | Increased pGSK-3β (CTX and HC) 30 and 60 min post-injection |
| Koike et al., | Male ICR mice (25–35 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 3–30 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced immobility in the TST 24 h post 30 mg/kg injection. Rapamycin reversed the ketamine-induced reduction in TST immobility | N/A |
| Reus et al., | Male Wistar rats (60 days old) | Fort Dodge Animal Health—0.1 g/ml injectable solution, 5–10 mg/kg | Immobility in the FST was reduced at 60 min postinjection by 10 mg/kg only | Ketamine 5 mg/kg increased the expression of BDNF, CREB, and PKC phosphorylation in the PFC. 5mg/kg increased BDNF in the HC and Amg. 10 mg/kg decreased BDNF in the PFC, HC, and Amg. 10 mg/kg increased CREB expression and PKC phosphorylation in the PFC |
| Li et al., | Male Sprague Dawley rats (150–250 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine produced AD effects in the FST, LH and NSF test 24 h post-injection, blocked by rapamycin | Ketamine 10 mg/kg activated mTOR, ERK, and PKB/Akt signaling, blocked by NBQX, Ketamine 10 mg/kg increased expression of certain synaptic proteins at 2, 6, and 72 h post-injection, blocked by rapamycin |
| Ghasemi et al., | Male NMRI mice (23–30 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 0.5–5 mg/kg (i.p) | Ketamine reduced immobility in the FST 45 min post-injection (2 and 5 mg/kg) | N/A |
| Cruz et al., | Male Swiss mice (25–35 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 6.35–50 mg/kg (i.p.) | 12.5, 25, and 50 mg/kg ketamine reduced immobility in the FST 30 min post-injection. Only 50 mg/kg ketamine reduced immobility in the TST | N/A |
| Engin et al., | Male Sprague-Dawley rats (180–360 g) | 10–50 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine (50 mg/kg) increased the % of open arm entries in the EPM. Both doses decreased immobility in the FST 30 min post-injection | N/A |
| Rezin et al., | Male Wistar rats (300 g) | Fort Dodge Animal Health 15 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine did not reverse the CMS-induced reduction in consumption of sweet food | Ketamine reversed the CMS-induced reductions in mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes |
| Garcia et al., | Male Wistar rats (60 days old) | Fort Dodge (Brazil) 5, 10, and 15 mg/kg (i.p.) | 1 h post-injection ketamine (5 & 10 mg/kg) significantly reduced immobility in the FST | BDNF increased in the HC following ketamine injection (15 mg/kg) |
| Hayase et al., | Male ICR mice (60–90 days old) | Sankyo Co., Ltd. Tokyo, Japan 30–1.0 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine increased the latency to immobility in the FST and was anxiolytic in the EPM at both doses 60 and 120 min post-injection | N/A |
| Rosa et al., | Swiss mice male and female (30–40 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 5 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced immobility in the TST 30 min post-injection | N/A |
| Mantovani et al., | Male Swiss mice 35–45 g) | 0.1 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced immobility in the TST 30 min post-injection | N/A |
This table outlines studies that have assessed the antidepressant-like effects of ketamine at 30 min to 24 h post-administration in commonly used behavioral tests. Molecular alterations of relevance to ketamine's molecular mechanism of action are also reported. FST, forced swim test; TST, tail suspension test; LH, learned helplessness; NSF, novelty suppressed feeding; SPT, sucrose preference test; EPM, elevated plus maze; AD, antidepressant; CMS, chronic mild stress; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; HC, hippocampus; CTX, cortex; Amg, amygdala; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; WT, wild type.
Protracted effects of ketamine.
| Akinfiresoye and Tizabi, | Male WKY rats | Fort-Dodge (Henry Schien), 0.25 and 0.5 mg/kg (i.p.), administered daily for 10 days | Only chronic administration of 0.5 mg/kg reduced immobility in the FST and increased sucrose intake in the SPT | 0.25 mg/kg ketamine did not alter mTOR phosphorylation or synapsin 1 and BDNF expression |
| Liu et al., | Male Sprague-Dawley rats (150–250 g) | Hospira Inc., 1 and 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced immobility in the FST 24 h and 1 week following a single 10 mg/kg injection. This effect was not observed 2 weeks post-injection | Ketamine increased p- S6K, p-ERK, p-Akt but not p-mTOR or GSK-3b 1 h post-injection (10 mg/kg). These changes were not detected 24 h post-injection. 5-HT and hypocretin induced EPSCs were increased 24 h following ketamine treatment (10 mg/kg). Ketamine 1 and 10 mg/kg increased spine head diameter and spine density |
| Ma et al., | C57Bl/6J mice (7 wks. old 20 g) | Gutian Pharmaceutical CO. Ltd., Fuijan, China. 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reversed CMS-induced increases in immobility in the FST and TST 48 h post-treatment. Ketamine reversed CMS-induced reductions in sucrose intake in the SPT, 24 h, 4, 6, and 8 days post-treatment. In non-stressed animals ketamine reduced immobility in the TST and FST at 3 and 24 h post-injection | N/A |
| Parise et al., | Male adolescent Sprague-Dawley rats (post-natal day 35–49) | Fort-Dodge (Schein), 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg (i.p.). Administered twice a day for either 1 or 15 days | Ketamine (10 and 20 mg/kg) reduced immobility in the FST 24 h after the 2nd injection. CMS-induced immobility was reversed by ketamine (20 mg/kg). No effect of ketamine on SPT was observed. Two months after chronic ketamine treatment rats exhibited an anxiolytic phenotype on the EPM and AD effects in the FST | N/A |
| Lindholm et al., | Adult male C57Bl/6J and WT & BDNF ± mice | Sigma-Aldrich 20 and 50 mg/kg (i.p.) | Decreased immobility in FST in WT mice at 45 min but not 7 days post-injection | No alterations in TrkB phosphorylation at 60 min or 7 days post-injection |
| Tizabi et al., | Male and Female WKY and Wistar rats | Fort-Dodge (Schein), 0.25–5 mg/kg (i.p.), administered once or daily for 10 days | No acute/chronic effect of ketamine on Wistar immobility levels in the FST. 2.5 and 5 mg/kg reduced immobility of WKY rats in the FST; the 5 mg/kg dose had protracted effects 1 week post-injection. Chronic administration of 2.5 and 5 mg/kg reduced immobility of WKY but not Wistar. The effect of the 2.5 mg.kg dose were evident 1 week following the cessation of treatment | Ketamine (chronic 0.5 mg/kg paradigm) increased AMPA receptor binding & the AMPA/NMDA ration in WKY rats |
| Autry et al., | Adult male C57BL/6 WT and inducible BDNF KO mutants | Fort Dodge Animal Health 3 mg/kg (i.p.) | No effect in EPM or fear conditioning 24 h post-injection. Reduced FST immobility at 30 min, 3 h, 24 h, and 1 week, blocked by NBQX. Reduced latency to feed in NSF, increased sucrose intake & decreased immobility in CMS mice 30 min post-injection. Rapamycin did not block ketamine-induced reductions in FST immobility 30 min post-injection. Anisomycin prevented the effects of ketamine in the NSF & FST. TrkB KO mice did not response to ketamine | Increased TrkB activation. Increased BDNF protein but not mRNA at 30 min and 1 h post-injection. Decreased phosphorylation of eEF2 in HC. Blocked spontaneous activity of NMDARs in HC cultures |
| Bechtholt-Gompf et al., | CD-1 and BALB/c mice | Sigma-Aldrich, dose range 0.5–3.0 mg/kg | Reduced immobility in TST 1 h post-injection (1.0 mg/kg), not observed at day 7. No effect on FST immobility at any dose, or time point | N/A |
| Koike et al., | Male ICR mice (25–35 g) and male Sprague-Dawley rats (230–350 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 3–30 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced the number of failures to escape in the LH test 30 min post 10 mg/kg injection. Reduced immobility in the TST 30 min & 72 h post 30 mg/kg injection | N/A |
| Li et al., | Male Sprague Dawley rats (150–250 g) | Sigma-Aldrich 10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reversed CMS-induced anhedonia in the NSF test 2 days post-injection. Sucrose consumption was increased 1, 3, 5, and 7 days following the single ketamine injection | Ketamine reversed CMS-induced deficits in synaptic EPSCs, spine density and synaptic protein expression. At 7 days post-treatment these effects were still apparent |
| Yilmaz et al., | Male Wistar rats (280–310 g) | Parke-Davis 50 mg/ml stock 1.0 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced FST at 3, 7, and 10 days post-injection, (this was only in the second test of each day). | N/A |
| Garcia et al., | Wistar rats (300–350 g) | Fort Dodge Animal Health 15 mg/kg once on day 7 or daily for 7 days | CMS-induced reductions in sucrose intake, weight loss, adrenal hypertrophy, and increased ACTH and corticosterone levels were reversed by acute and chronic ketamine administration. Chronic ketamine increased sucrose intake in controls | No differences in HC BDNF concentrations |
| Garcia et al., | Wistar rats (300–350 g) | Fort Dodge Animal Health, 5, 10, and 15 mg/kg—daily i.p. injections for 12 days | All doses reduced immobility in the FST | HC BDNF concentrations were not altered |
| Popik et al., | Male Wistar rats (270 g) and male Sprague Dawley rats (275 g), C57/Bl/Han male mice (24 g) and Male Swiss mice (28 g) | Biowet, Pulawy, Poland, FST rats, 1.0 mg/kg. TST mice, 50–1.0 mg/kg. FST mice, 1.25–10 mg/kg | Reduction of immobility in the FST in mice but not in rats at 30 min post-injection only (50 mg/kg). Ketamine reduced immobility in the TST at 40 min but not at 1 week post-injection | N/A |
| Maeng et al., | Mice | Sigma-Aldrich 0.5–10 mg/kg (i.p.) | Ketamine reduced the number of escape failures in LH 24 h post-injection. Ketamine (2.5 mg/kg) reduced immobility in the FST at 30 min and 2 weeks post-injection | Ketamine reduced phosphorylation of HC GluR1 (S845), rescued by NBQX |
This table outlines studies that have assessed the antidepressant-like effects of ketamine from day 2, or, 48 h post-administration onwards in commonly used behavioral tests. In some of these studies earlier time points have been assessed, the results are also included in this table. Molecular alterations of relevance to ketamine's molecular mechanism of action are also reported. FST, forced swim test; TST, tail suspension test; LH, learned helplessness; NSF, novelty suppressed feeding; SPT, sucrose preference test; EPM, elevated plus maze; AD, antidepressant; CMS, chronic mild stress; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; HC, hippocampus; CTX, cortex; Amg, amygdala; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; WTm, wild type.
Figure 1Following blockade of NMDARs, phosphorylation of Akt activates mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1), which results in increased p70S6K phosphorylation and increased protein translation via inhibition of 4E-BP and release of eIF-4B. Glutamate binds AMPARs, which induces depolarization of the membrane, enabling Ca2+ influx through VDCCs. This results in BDNF release from synaptic vesicles. The subsequent binding of TrkB receptors induces ERK and Akt signaling. These pathways all converge to increase synaptic protein translation and receptor trafficking to the cell membrane. Additionally, activation of mTORC2 by S6, and inhibition of GSK-3, induces mTORC1 activation via increased Akt phosphorylation. Furthermore, mTORC2 activation induces protein kinase C (PKC) signaling transduction, which regulates actin and other cytoskeletal proteins.