| Literature DB >> 28588483 |
Alline C Campos1, Manoela V Fogaça1, Franciele F Scarante1, Sâmia R L Joca2, Amanda J Sales2, Felipe V Gomes3, Andreza B Sonego1, Naielly S Rodrigues1, Ismael Galve-Roperh4,5, Francisco S Guimarães1.
Abstract
Beneficial effects of cannabidiol (CBD) have been described for a wide range of psychiatric disorders, including anxiety, psychosis, and depression. The mechanisms responsible for these effects, however, are still poorly understood. Similar to clinical antidepressant or atypical antipsychotic drugs, recent findings clearly indicate that CBD, either acutely or repeatedly administered, induces plastic changes. For example, CBD attenuates the decrease in hippocampal neurogenesis and dendrite spines density induced by chronic stress and prevents microglia activation and the decrease in the number of parvalbumin-positive GABA neurons in a pharmacological model of schizophrenia. More recently, it was found that CBD modulates cell fate regulatory pathways such as autophagy and others critical pathways for neuronal survival in neurodegenerative experimental models, suggesting the potential benefit of CBD treatment for psychiatric/cognitive symptoms associated with neurodegeneration. These changes and their possible association with CBD beneficial effects in psychiatric disorders are reviewed here.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; autophagy; cannabinoids; depression; neurogenesis; schizophrenia; synaptic remodeling
Year: 2017 PMID: 28588483 PMCID: PMC5441138 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
CBD effects in psychiatric disorders.
| Antidepressant-like | Forced Swimming Test (FST) | 30 mg/kg | Acute, i.p. | Swiss mice | 5HT1A | Zanelati et al., |
| FST and Tail Suspension Test (TST) | 200 mg/kg | Acute, i.p. | Swiss Webster mice (FST) DBA/2 mice (TST) | Not determinated | El-Alfya et al., | |
| FST | 30 mg/kg | Acute and chronic, i.p. | Wistar rats | – | Réus et al., | |
| Antidepressant-/Anxiolytic-like | Chronic Unpredictable Stress | 30 mg/kg | Chronic, i.p. | GFAP-thymidine kinase (GFAP-TK) transgenic mice | CB1, increased neurogenesis and anandamide levels | Campos et al., |
| Novelty Suppressed Feeding | C57BL6 mice | |||||
| Elevated Plus Maze (EPM) | ||||||
| Antidepressant-like | FST and TST | 3 and 30 mg/kg | Acute and chronic, i.p. | Swiss mice | Increased neurogenesis | Schiavon et al., |
| Olfactory bulbectomy | 50 mg/kg | Acute and chronic, i.p. | C57BL6 mice | 5HT1A | Linge et al., | |
| FST | Intracerebral (mPFC), acute | Wistar rats | 5HT1A | Sartim et al., | ||
| FST | 30 mg/kg | Acute, i.p. | Swiss mice | Not determinated | Breuer et al., | |
| Saccharin consumption test | 30 mg/kg | Oral, acute | Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat | Not determinated | Shoval et al., | |
| Antipsychotic | Repeated administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 | 15–60 mg/kg | 14 days, i.p. | C57BL6/J mice | Attenuated parvalbumin loss and glial activation in the mPFC, | Gomes et al., |
| Amphetamine sensitization model Prepulse inhibition (PPI) | 100 ng/0.5 μL | Intra-NAc shell/acute | Sprague Dawley rats | Attenuated PPI disruption and increased dopamine system activity via a mTOR/p70S6Kinase signaling pathway | Renard et al., | |
| Acute administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 | 5 mg/kg | Acute, i.p. | Swiss mice | TRPV1 receptors | Long et al., | |
| Anxiolytic-like | EPM Vogel‘s conflict test | 30 nmol | Intra-periqueductal gray matter | Wistar rats | 5HT1A | Campos and Guimarães, |
| EPM | 60 nmol | Intra-periqueductal gray matter | Wistar rats | TRPV1 | Campos and Guimarães, | |
| Predator threat-induced long lasting behavioral alterations | 5 mg/kg | 7 days, i.p. | Wistar rats | 5HT1A | Campos et al., | |
| Elevated T-Maze | 5 mg/kg | 21 days, i.p. | Wistar rats | 5HT1A | Campos et al., | |
| Marble burying | 15–60 mg/kg | Acute, i.p. | Swiss mice | CB1 | Casarotto et al., | |
| Anxiogenic-like | Contextual Fear conditioning | 10 mg/kg | 14 days, i.p. | Lister-hooded rats | Decreased levels of the phosphorylated form of ERK1/2 in the PFC | ElBatsh et al., |
| Antipsychotic | Double blind controlled clinical trial | 600–800 mg | 28 days, oral | Schizophrenia patients | Reduces psychotic symptoms similar to amisulpride | Leweke et al., |
| Placebo-controlled clinical trial | Not informed | Oral | Schizophrenia patients | Reduces psychotic symptoms in patients that have previously failed to respond adequately to first line anti-psychotic medications | GW Pharmaceuticals, | |
| Anxiolytic | 400 mg | Acute, oral | ↓ Subjective anxiety and ↑ mental sedation. | Crippa et al., | ||
| ↓ Blood Flow in posterior cingulated cortex and Amygdala/Bed nucleus of stria terminalis and ↑ in left parahippocampal gyrus | ||||||
| 600 mg | Acute, oral | ↓ Blood-oxygen-level dependent contrast imaging (BOLD) of amydala signal and amygdala-anterior cingulated connectivity during fearful faces presentations | Fusar-Poli et al., | |||
| 600 mg | Acute, oral | ↓ Activation left temporal and insular cortex during motor inhibition task | Borgwardt et al., | |||
i.p., intraperitoneal; mPFC, medial prefrontal córtex; ↓, decreases; ↑, increases.
CBD and neuroprotective mechanisms.
| Prevents NMDA receptor-induced excitoxicity | E17 cortical neurons culture | EC50 = 3.7 μM | Wistar rat | Effect independent of cannabinoid receptors. | Hampson et al., | |
| ↓Phosphorylated form of p38/MAP kinase, ↓Caspase 3 levels, and NFκ-b activation | β amyloid-induced neurotoxicity in PC12 cells | 10 μM | PC12 cells | Antioxidant | Esposito et al., | |
| Prevented gliosis, neuronal death and ↑ hippocampal neurogenesis | Genetic model of Alzheimer's Disease | 10 mg/kg | 15 days | C57BL6 mice | PPARγ | Esposito et al., |
| ↓Aβ cell viability and ↓LPS (conditioned media) induced microglia activation | β amyloid -induced neuronal toxicity in neuroblastoma cells. LPS-induced microglial-activation | 10 μM | Neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells/Microglial (BV-2) cells | Not determinated | Janefjord et al., | |
| Improved cell viability | Amyloid β -induced toxicity and tert-butyl hydroperoxide-induced oxidative stress | 0.01–10 μM | 15 min pre-incubation before Aβ or sAβ addition/ 24-h incubation for oxidative stress analysis | PC12 and Neuroblastoma (SH-SYS5) cells | Not determinated | Harvey et al., |
| ↓ Amyloid- β production | Amyloid β -induced neurotoxicity | 100 nM | 24 h | SHSY5Y (APP+) neurons | PPARγ | Scuderi et al., |
| Reversed 3-nitropropionic acid—induced ↓ GABA contents, ↓ substance P, ↓ neuronal-specific enolase and superoxide dismutase(SOD)-2 | (10 mg/kg) 3-nitropropionic acid-induced) striatal lesions | 5 mg/kg | 5 days, i.p. | Sprague-Dawley rats | Independent of CB1, TRPV1 and A2A receptors | Sagredo et al., |
| ↓ Levels of IL-1beta, GFAP and iNOS | Amyloid β -induced neurotoxicity | 10 mg/kg | i.p. | C57BL6 mice | Not determinated | Esposito et al., |
| Reduced dopamine depletion and ↑mRNA levels of SOD in the substantia nigra | 6-hydroxydopamine toxicity | 3 mg/kg | 14 days, i.p. | Sprague-Dawley rats | Antioxidant | Garcia-Arencibia et al., |
| ↓Cell death | H2O2-inducedoxidative stress in Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells | 1 μM | Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells | Not determinated | Mecha et al., | |
| ↓of carbonyl groups and prevents the decrease in BDNF expression | Amphetamine-induced oxidative stress | 60 mg/kg | 2 weeks, i.p. | Wistar rats | Not determinated | Valvassori et al., |
| ↓ NFκ-B, ↓ ICAM-1 and VACAM-1 | High glucose-induced mithocondrial superoxide generation | 4 μM | Human coronary artery endothelial cells | Independent from CB1 and CB2 receptors | Rajesh et al., | |
| Prevented Aβ-induced cognitive deficits, ↓ microglia activation, ↓ IL-6 mRNA expression Inhibited NO generation and ATP-induced intracellular Ca2+ levels | Rat primary cortical cultures, N13 and BV-2 microglial cells Morris water maze | 10–1,000 nM | Rat primary cortical cultures, N13 and BV-2 microglial cells C57BL6 mice | Some of the | Martín-Moreno et al., | |
| Blocked LPS-induced STAT1 activation | LPS-induced BV-2 activation | 10 μM | BV-2 microglial cells | Not determinated | Kozela et al., | |
| ↓Apoptosis; ↓Excitotoxicty and neuroinflamation | Newborn hypoxic-ischemic brain damage | 0.1–1,000 μM | Brain slices from C57BL6 mice | CB2 and A2A receptors | Castillo et al., | |
| Protects against the reduction in tyrosine hydroxylase activity | 6-hydroxydopamine-induced toxicity in the striatum and substantia nigra | 3 mg/kg | 14 days, i.p. | Sprague-Dawley rats | Not determinated | Lastres-Becker et al., |
| ↑ Viable neurons and ↓ excitoxicity, oxidative stress, and inflammation | Newborn hypoxic-ischemic brain damage (HI) | 1 mg/kg | 30 min after HI, i.p. | Newborn pigs | CB2 and 5HT1A receptors | Pazos et al., |
| Improve of cognition and motor activity. Restores BDNF levels | Encephalopathy (bile duct ligation) | 5 mg/kg | 28 days, i.p. | C57BL6 mice | 5HT1A | Magen et al., |
| Improvments od liver function, normalizes 5-HT levels, and improves brain pathology | Encephalopathy (thioacetamide) | 5 mg/kg | Single dose | C57BL6 mice | 5HT-dependent mechanism | Avraham et al., |
| Faciltates autophagic flux and decrease oxidative stress | Pilocarpine-Induced Seizure | 100 ng | Intracerebroventricular | Wistar rats | Induction of autophagy pathway | Hosseinzadeh et al., |
| Suppresses the transcription proinflammatory genes | MOG35-55-specific T cell in the presence of spleen-derived antigen presenting cells | 5 μM | MOG35-55- and APCs isolated from spleens of C57BL6 | Not determinated | Kozela et al., | |
| Attenuates TNF-α production and ↓ adenosine transport | murine microglia and RAW264.7 macrophages LPS-treated mice | 500 nM or 1 mg/kg | Murine microglia | A2A adenosine receptor | Carrier et al., | |
| RAW264.7 macrophages C57BL6 mice | ||||||
| Improves motor deficits in the chronic phase; ↓ microglial activation and Il-beta and TNF-α production | Viral model of multiple sclerosis | 5 mg/kg | 7 days, i.p | SJL/J mice | A2A adenosine receptor | Carrier et al., |
| Normalizes synaptophyisin and caspase 3 expression | Brain damage induced by iron overload during neonatal period | Not informed | 14 day, i.p. | Wistar rats | Not determinated | da Silva et al., |
| Prevented MPP-induced toxicity and induces neurite growth | MPP-induced toxicity in PC12 cells and SH-SY5Y | 1 μM | PC12 and SH-SY5Y cells | TRKA | Santos et al., | |
| Prevents cognitive and anxiogenic effects, ↓ TNF-α and IL-6 ↑ BDNF levels | Murine model of cerebral Malaria | 30 mg/kg | 10 days, i.p. | C57BL6 mice | Not determinated | Campos et al., |
i.p., intra peritoneal; ↓, decreases; ↑, increases.
Figure 1Multiple mechanisms proposed to explain CBD effect in neuropsychiatric disorders. CBD seems to interact with numerous different targets. It can act as a positive modulator of 5HT1A-mediated neurotransmission or as an agonist at TRPV1 and PPARγ receptors. In addition, CBD can facilitate anandamide (AEA)-mediated neurotransmission (by inhibiting FAAH) and induce antioxidant actions. CBD also promotes a complex set of changes in crucial intra-cellular pathways such as mTOR, autophagy and GSK3β, resulting in neuroprotection, decreased proinflammatory responses and facilitation of neuroplastic events. Taken together, these mechanisms would lead to an overall beneficial effect of CBD in neuropsychiatric disorders. *Little is known about the contribution of TRPV1 and 5HT1A for the effects of CBD on glial reactivity and on adult hippocampal neurogenesis. **CBD effects in reducing glial cell reactictivity and preventing stress-induced or amyloid-β-induced decreased adult hippocampal neurogenesis seem to depend on activation of CB1/CB2 (indirectly) and PPARγ. Because CB1 and CB2 are expressed in both neural precursor cells (NPCs) and glial cells, CBD effects on adult hippocampal neurogenesis could be a result of its actions on NPCs and/or attenuation of glial reactivity. BDNF, Brain derived neurotrophic factor; PSD95, postsynaptic density protein 95; mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin; GSK3β, Glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta.