| Literature DB >> 29736027 |
Kallia Apazoglou1, Séverine Farley1, Victor Gorgievski1, Raoul Belzeaux2,3,4, Juan Pablo Lopez2, Julien Grenier5, El Chérif Ibrahim4,6, Marie-Anne El Khoury1, Yiu C Tse2, Raphaele Mongredien1, Alexandre Barbé1, Carlos E A de Macedo1, Wojciech Jaworski1, Ariane Bochereau1, Alejandro Orrico1, Elsa Isingrini2, Chloé Guinaudie2, Lenka Mikasova7, Franck Louis1, Sophie Gautron1, Laurent Groc7, Charbel Massaad5, Ferah Yildirim8, Vincent Vialou1, Sylvie Dumas9, Fabio Marti1, Naguib Mechawar2, Elise Morice1, Tak P Wong2, Jocelyne Caboche1, Gustavo Turecki2, Bruno Giros10,11,12, Eleni T Tzavara13,14.
Abstract
Depression, a devastating psychiatric disorder, is a leading cause of disability worldwide. Current antidepressants address specific symptoms of the disease, but there is vast room for improvement 1 . In this respect, new compounds that act beyond classical antidepressants to target signal transduction pathways governing synaptic plasticity and cellular resilience are highly warranted2-4. The extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway is implicated in mood regulation5-7, but its pleiotropic functions and lack of target specificity prohibit optimal drug development. Here, we identified the transcription factor ELK-1, an ERK downstream partner 8 , as a specific signaling module in the pathophysiology and treatment of depression that can be targeted independently of ERK. ELK1 mRNA was upregulated in postmortem hippocampal tissues from depressed suicides; in blood samples from depressed individuals, failure to reduce ELK1 expression was associated with resistance to treatment. In mice, hippocampal ELK-1 overexpression per se produced depressive behaviors; conversely, the selective inhibition of ELK-1 activation prevented depression-like molecular, plasticity and behavioral states induced by stress. Our work stresses the importance of target selectivity for a successful approach for signal-transduction-based antidepressants, singles out ELK-1 as a depression-relevant transducer downstream of ERK and brings proof-of-concept evidence for the druggability of ELK-1.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29736027 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-018-0011-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440