| Literature DB >> 25610380 |
Georgia Balsevich1, Christian Namendorf2, Tamara Gerlach2, Manfred Uhr2, Mathias V Schmidt1.
Abstract
Major depression (MD) is one of the most common psychiatric disorders, severely affecting the quality of life of millions of people worldwide. Despite the availability of several classes of antidepressants, treatment efficacy is still very variable and many patients do not respond to the treatment. Clomipramine (CMI), a classical and widely used antidepressant, shows widespread interindividual variability of efficacy, while the environmental factors contributing to such variability remain unclear. We investigated whether chronic stress modulates the bio-distribution of CMI, and as a result the behavioral response to CMI treatment in a mouse model of chronic social defeat stress (CSDS). Our results show that stress exposure increased anxiety-like and depressive-like behaviors and altered the stress response. Chronic defeat stress furthermore significantly altered CMI bio-distribution. Interestingly, CMI bio-distribution highly correlated with anxiety-like and depressive-like behaviors only under basal conditions. Taken together, we provide first evidence demonstrating that chronic stress exposure modulates CMI bio-distribution and behavioral responses. This may contribute to CMI's broad interindividual variability, and is especially relevant in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: antidepressants; chronic social defeat stress; clomipramine; metabolic ratio; mouse model; tissue distribution
Year: 2015 PMID: 25610380 PMCID: PMC4285108 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Effects of CMI treatment and/or chronic defeat stress on behavioral and physiological parameters in mice. (A) The number of entries into the center and the time spent in the center of a 30-min open field test. (B) The time spent struggling and the time spent immobile in the forced swim test. (C) Basal morning corticosterone levels as well as response corticosterone levels and recovery corticosterone levels 30 min and 90 min following an acute stressor (FST), respectively. (D) Relative adrenal gland weight. All data were analyzed by two-way ANOVA and are represented as the mean +/− S.E.M. ## p < 0.01, ### p < 0.001, + p < 0.05; # significant stress effect and + significant CMI treatment effect.
Absolute concentrations of CMI and DCMI in plasma (ng/ml) and brain (ng/g) tissue.
| Condition | Measurement | Mean +/− S.E.M. | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Absolute CMI plasma | 24.2 +/− 5.5 | ng/ml |
| CSDS | 14.3 +/− 1.4 | ||
| Control | Absolute DCMI plasma | 4.3 +/− 0.8 | ng/ml |
| CSDS | 6.3 +/− 1.3 | ||
| Control | Absolute CMI brain | 224.3 +/− 59.1 | ng/g |
| CSDS | 86.2 +/− 10.4 | ||
| Control | Absolute DCMI brain | 23.4 +/− 5.6 | ng/g |
| CSDS | 39.2 +/− 8.4 |
Data are represented as the mean +/− S.E.M.
Figure 2Stress-induced modulatory effects on CMI pharmacokinetics. (A) Clomipramine metabolic ratio in the plasma and brain. (B) Partitioning ratio for CMI and its active metabolite DCMI. Data were analyzed by Student’s T-tests for stress effects and by two-way ANOVA for tissue and stress effects on tissue distribution. All data are represented as the mean +/− S.E.M. **p < 0.01, # p < 0.05, ## p < 0.01, ### p < 0.001; # significant stress effect and * significant tissue effect.
Figure 3Correlational analysis between the plasma (A) and brain (B) metabolic ratio and time spent immobile in the FST. (C) Relationship between DCMI partitioning ratio and time spent immobile in the FST. The mean of the water-treated control group is shown as a dashed line and the corresponding S.E.M. is shaded in gray. Correlations were analyzed with the Pearson product-moment test. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.