| Literature DB >> 33328997 |
Lauren Wegman-Points1, Brock Pope1, Allison Zobel-Mask1, Lori Winter1, Eric Wauson1, Vanja Duric1, Li-Lian Yuan1.
Abstract
Recent research into the rapid antidepressant effect of subanesthetic doses of ketamine have identified a series of relevant protein cascades activated within hours of administration. Prior to, or concurrent with, these activation cascades, ketamine treatment generates dissociative and psychotomimetic side effects along with an increase in circulating glucocorticoids. In rats, we observed an over 3-fold increase in corticosterone levels in both serum and brain tissue, within an hour of administration of low dose ketamine (10 mg/kg), but not with (2R, 6R)-hydroxynorketamine (HNK) (10 mg/kg), a ketamine metabolite shown to produce antidepressant-like action in rodents without inducing immediate side-effects. Hippocampal tissue from ketamine, but not HNK, injected animals displayed a significant increase in the expression of sgk1, a downstream effector of glucocorticoid receptor signaling. To examine the role conscious sensation of ketamine's side effects plays in the release of corticosterone, we assessed serum corticosterone levels after ketamine administration while under isoflurane anesthesia. Under anesthesia, ketamine failed to increase circulating corticosterone levels relative to saline controls. Concurrent with its antidepressant effects, ketamine generates a release of glucocorticoids potentially linked to disturbing cognitive side effects and the activation of distinct molecular pathways which should be considered when attempting to delineate the molecular mechanisms of its antidepressant function.Entities:
Keywords: corticosterone; glucocorticoids; hydroxynorketamine; ketamine; rapid-acting antidepressant; stress
Year: 2020 PMID: 33328997 PMCID: PMC7734413 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.590221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Schematic representation of the timeline for oral corticosterone exposure, drug administration, and tissue collection. (A) The rats were provided with water containing 50 μg/ml of corticosterone for 2 weeks, after which the dosage was tapered off with 3 days to 25 μg/ml followed by three more days at 12.5 μg/ml. The rats were returned to regular drinking water for 3–7 days to wash out exogenous corticosterone before injection and sacrifice. The rats with access to drinking water throughout the 4-week period served as naïve controls. Measurement of corticosterone levels in serum and brain tissue in male and female rats 1-h post injection. Ci-stress male and female rats received injection of saline (male n = 11; female n = 6), ketamine (10 mg/kg) (male n = 11; female n = 6) or HNK (10 mg/kg) (male n = 6; female n = 6). Naïve rats received only saline (male n = 12; female n = 6). (B) Circulating corticosterone levels in male rats. (C) Cortical brain levels of corticosterone in male rats. (D) Circulating corticosterone levels in female rats. (E) Cortical brain levels of corticosterone in female rats. Measurement of serum corticosterone levels 1-h post injection of naïve rats (F). Timeline of naïve male treatment and tissue collection. (G) Ketamine injection caused an increase in circulating corticosterone versus saline injection in naïve rats (saline n = 5, ketamine n = 5). [(B–D) ***p < 0.001, ****p < 0.0001, two-way ANOVA with Tukey post-test, (G) ***p < 0.001, student t-test).
Increased levels of circulating corticosterone in the blood correlates with increased concentrations found in tissue from the cerebral cortex.
| Gender | Treatment | Blood (ng/ml) | Brain (ng/mg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Naïve Saline | 136.1 ± 35.6 | 120.9 ± 26.74 |
| ci-stress-saline | 189.4 ± 51.6 | 229.6 ± 68.12 | |
| ci-stress-ketamine | 532.8 ± 47.3**** | 729.9 ± 78.75**** | |
| ci-stress-HNK | 108.7 ± 33.3 | 113.5 ± 30.0 | |
| Female | Naïve Saline | 284.2 ± 84.3 | 169.2 ± 40.57 |
| ci-stress-saline | 292.2 ± 83.2 | 257.8 ± 92.0 | |
| ci-stress-ketamine | 1106 ± 146.0**** | 758.0 ± 81.46**** | |
| ci-stress-HNK | 170.3 ± 68.2 | 141.2 ± 43.2 |
**** p < 0.001 two-way ANOVA.
FIGURE 2Expression of glucocorticoid effector sgk1 gene expression in male and female rats 1-h or 24-h post injection expressed as fold change versus naïve controls. (A) Sgk1 expression in HPC of ci-stress male rats versus controls 1-h after injection (n = 6 for each condition). (B) Sgk1 expression in HPC of ci-stress female rats versus controls 1-h after injection (n = 6 for each condition). (C) Sgk1 expression in HPC of male rats 24 h after injection (n = 4 for each condition). All values are presented as a fold change from stress control animals injected with saline. (**p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 two-way ANOVA with Tukey post-test on ΔCt values).
FIGURE 3Circulating corticosterone levels of male rats under isoflurane anesthesia before and after saline or ketamine injection. (A) Timeline showing the experimental design. Blood collection and injection timepoints are noted with black arrows. (B) Post-injection corticosterone levels for saline and ketamine (n = 7 for both groups). (C) Fold increases between pre and post corticosterone levels after injection.