| Literature DB >> 26706783 |
Lucia Caffino1, Marzia Di Chio2, Giuseppe Giannotti1, Marco Venniro2, Anna Mutti2, Laura Padovani2, David Cheung3, Guido F Fumagalli2, David T Yew3, Fabio Fumagalli1, Cristiano Chiamulera4.
Abstract
Ketamine is a drug of abuse with a unique profile, which besides its inherent mechanism of action as a non-competitive antagonist of the NMDA glutamate receptor, displays both antidepressant and reinforcing properties. The major aim of our study was to find a molecular signature of ketamine that may help in discriminating between its reinforcing and antidepressant effects. To this end, we focused our attention on BDNF, a neurotrophin that has been shown to play a role in both antidepressant and reinforcing properties of several drugs. Rats were exposed to self-administer intravenous (IV) ketamine (S/A) for 43 days or to receive a single IV ketamine 0.5mg/kg, or vehicle infusion. Although the dose we employed is lower than that reported by the literature, it however yields Cmax values that correspond to those achieved in humans after antidepressant treatment. Our results show that while the single infusion of ketamine increased the neurotrophin expression in the hippocampus while reducing it in the ventral striatum, a feature shared with other antidepressants, the repeated self-administration reduced mBDNF expression and its downstream signalling in both ventral striatum and hippocampus. Further, we here show that phosphorylation of Akt is oppositely regulated by ketamine, pointing to this pathway as central to the different actions of the drug. Taken together, we here point to BDNF and its downstream signalling pathway as a finely tuned mechanism whose modulation might subserve the different features of ketamine.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressant; BDNF; Ketamine; Rat; Reinforcement; Zif-268
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26706783 DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2015.12.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Res ISSN: 1043-6618 Impact factor: 7.658