| Literature DB >> 31057408 |
Sebastiano Alfio Torrisi1, Gian Marco Leggio1, Filippo Drago1, Salvatore Salomone1.
Abstract
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental illness developed by vulnerable individuals exposed to life-threatening events. The pharmacological unresponsiveness displayed by the vast majority of PTSD patients has raised considerable interest in understanding the poorly known pathophysiological mechanisms underlying this disorder. Most studies in the field focused, so far, on noradrenergic mechanisms, because of their well-established role in either tuning arousal or in encoding emotional memories. However, less attention has been paid to other neural systems. Manipulations of the dopaminergic system alter behavioral responses to stressful situations and recent findings suggest that dopaminergic dysfunction might play an overriding role in the pathophysiology of PTSD. In the present review, dopaminergic mechanisms relevant for the pathogenesis of PTSD, as well as potential dopaminergic-based pharmacotherapies are discussed in the context of addressing the unmet medical need for new and effective drugs for treatment of PTSD.Entities:
Keywords: SSRI; arousal; dopamine D3 receptor; intrusive symptoms; mood and cognition; post-traumatic stress disorder
Year: 2019 PMID: 31057408 PMCID: PMC6478703 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Findings from human studies demonstrating an impact of DAergic dysfunction on PTSD.
| Dopaminergic dysfunction | Description | References |
|---|---|---|
| ↑ Urinary DA levels | ↑ Severity of PTSD symptoms (especially intrusion symptoms) CRITERION B | |
| VNTR DAT SLC6A3 3′ polymorphism | Excess of nine repeat allele in PTSD patients | |
| VNTR DRD4 exon III polymorphism | ↑ Severity of PTSD symptoms on the Avoidance/Numbing scale. CRITERION C | |
| VNTR DAT SLC6A3 3′ polymorphism | ↑ Arousal symptoms CRITERION E | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | ↑ Risk of PTSD in Met/Met homozygotes | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | Attenuation of the effect of PTSD-related processes on right anterior cingulate cortex volume | |
| ↑ DAT density | ↑ Striatal DAT density in PTSD patients | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | ↑ Fear to safety signal and impaired fear extinction in PTSD Met/Met homozygotes as compared to Val allele carrier CRITERION B | |
| DRD3 single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs2134655, rs201252087, rs4646996, and rs9868039) | The minor alleles give resilience against PTSD | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | Smaller left hippocampus in PTSD Val/Val homozygotes as compared to Met allele carriers | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | Childhood trauma-dependent association between the Met/Met genotype and fear inhibition/extinction deficit CRITERION B | |
| COMT Val158Met polymorphism | Better working memory and executive functions in PTSD Met carriers as compared to Val/Val homozygotes CRITERION D | |
FIGURE 1The failure of the “top-down” inhibitory control exerted by the mPFC over the amygdala triggers hyperarousal and intrusion symptoms. In a normal subject (A), the mPFC exerts a homeostatic inhibitory control over the amygdala (Amy). This “top-down” brake maintains appropriate behavior patterns under stressful conditions. In PTSD patients (B) the hypoactive mPFC removes the brake over the Amy, whose hyperactivity mainly generates hyperarousal and intrusion symptoms (Fenster et al., 2018, see also text).
FIGURE 2Hypothetical influence of DA-induced hyperarousal (CRITERION E) on symptoms (CRITERION D) occurring in post-traumatic stress disorder.