| Literature DB >> 29225337 |
Jared L Moreines1,2,3, Zoe L Owrutsky4, Kimberly G Gagnon4, Anthony A Grace4,5.
Abstract
Clinical evidence supports the use of second-generation dopamine D2 receptor antagonists (D2RAs) as adjunctive therapy or in some cases monotherapy in patients with depression. However, the mechanism for the clinical antidepressant effect of D2RAs remains unclear. Specifically, given accumulating evidence for decreased ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine system function in depression, an antidepressant effect of a medication that is expected to further reduce dopamine system activity seems paradoxical. In the present paper we used electrophysiological single unit recordings of identified VTA dopamine neurons to characterize the impact of acute and repeated administration of the D2RA quetiapine at antidepressant doses in non-stressed rats and those exposed to the chronic mild stress (CMS) rodent depression model, the latter modeling the hypodopaminergic state observed in patients with depression. We found that acute quetiapine increased dopamine neuron population activity in non-stressed rats, but not in CMS-exposed rats. Conversely, repeated quetiapine increased VTA dopamine neuron population activity to normal levels in CMS-exposed rats, but had no persisting effects in non-stressed rats. These data suggest that D2RAs may exert their antidepressant actions via differential effects on the dopamine system in a normal vs. hypoactive state. This explanation is supported by prior studies showing that D2RAs differentially impact the dopamine system in animal models of schizophrenia and normal rats; the present results extend this phenomenon to an animal model of depression. These data highlight the importance of studying medications in the context of animal models of psychiatric disorders as well as normal conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29225337 PMCID: PMC5802622 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-017-0039-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1Experimental Timeline. In Experiments 1 and 2, rats experienced 5–7 weeks of CMS or control conditions. This was followed by acute administration of quetiapine on the day of dopamine neuron recording (Experiment 1) or 21+ days of quetiapine with continued CMS exposure up to the day of dopamine neuron recording (Experiment 2). In Experiment 3, rats living in normal housing conditions received 21+ days of quetiapine up to the day of dopamine neuron recording, which included measurements of dopamine neuron population activity before and immediately following a pre-synaptic dose of apomorphine
Fig. 2Impact of Acute Quetiapine Treatment in Non-stressed and Chronically Stressed Rats. Acute administration of quetiapine increased dopamine population activity in non-stressed rats, but had no effects on CMS-exposed rats. a Dopamine population activity was increased following acute administration of quetiapine to non-stressed rats, but the reduction observed in stressed rats was not ameliorated by acute administration. b-g Average dopamine neuron firing rate b-d and proportion of burst firing e-g were unchanged by acute administration of quetiapine to non-stressed or CMS-exposed rats. The parallel increase in slow firing c, nonbursting f neurons in non-stressed rats likely reflects activation of previously silent neurons, that when combined with a rightward shift in these parameters in previously firing neurons results in no net change in firing rate or pattern
Summary of dopamine neuron data for acute quetiapine treatment in Experiment 1
| CON-VEH-Acute | CON-QTP-Acute | CMS-VEH-Acute | CMS-QTP-Acute | |
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| Cells Per Track |
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| 2-Way interaction |
| − | − | − |
| Drug effect | F(1,25) = 3.3; |
| − | t(25) = 0.15; |
| Stress effect |
| − |
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| Firing Rate (Hz) |
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| 2-Way interaction | F(1,227) = 0.46; | −d | −d | −d |
| Drug effect | F(1,227) = 2.6; | −d | − | −d |
| Stress effect | F(1,227) = 0.94; | − | −d | −d |
| Bursting (%SIB) |
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| 2-Way interaction | F(1,227) = 0.056; | −d | −d | −d |
| Drug effect | F(1,227) = 2.8; | −d | − | −d |
| Stress effect | F(1,277) = 0.39; | − | −d | −d |
| Group N (Rats) |
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%SIB, Percent of Spikes in Burst; CMS chronic mild stress, CON control, QTP quetiapine, VEH vehicle;
aMain effects among all groups
bSidak’s post-hoc test for drug effect (within same stress category)
cSidak’s post-hoc test for stress effect (within same drug group)
dMain effect not significant, post-hoc test not performed
Bold values signify summaries of primary data or a statistically significant analysis of data
Fig. 3Impact of repeated quetiapine administration in non-stressed and chronically stressed rats. Repeated administration of quetiapine for 21+ days reversed the CMS-induced decrease in dopamine population activity without affecting this measure in non-stressed rats. a Dopamine population activity was significantly increased in CMS-exposed rats following repeated quetiapine treatment, but was unchanged in non-stressed rats treated repeatedly with vehicle. b-d Average dopamine neuron firing rate was unchanged by chronic stress or quetiapine b, nor was the distribution of firing rates c-d. e-g Despite a significant main effect of Drug in 2-way ANOVA e possibly reflecting fewer high-bursting neurons f-g, post-hoc testing did not reveal significant changes in proportion of burst activity in either non-stressed or CMS-exposed rats treated repeatedly with quetiapine as compared to their respective control group treated repeatedly with vehicle
Summary of dopamine neuron data for repeated quetiapine treatment in Experiment 2
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| 2-Way interaction |
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| - |
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| Drug effect | F(1,42) = 2.3; | t(42) = 0.53; | - |
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| Stress effect |
| - |
| t(42) = 0.11; |
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| 2-Way interaction | F(1,42) = 1.5; | -d | -d |
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| Drug effect | F(1,42) = 0.22; | -d | - | -d |
| Stress effect | F(1,42) = 0.23; | - | -d | -d |
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| 2-Way interaction | F(1,301) = 0.077; | -d | -d | -d |
| Drug effect |
| t(301) = 2.0; | - | t(301) = 1.3; |
| Stress effect | F(1,301) = 0.36; | - | -d | -d |
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aMain effects among all groups
bSidak’s post-hoc test for drug effect (within same stress category)
cSidak’s post-hoc test for stress effect (within same drug group)
dMain effect not significant, post-hoc test not performed
%SIB, Percent of Spikes in Burst; CMS chronic mild stress, CON control, QTP quetiapine, VEH vehicle