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Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression

Central insulin receptor-mediated signaling is attracting the growing attention of researchers because of rapidly accumulating evidence implicating it in the mechanisms of plasticity, stress response, and neuropsychiatric disorders including depression. Dicholine succinate (DS), a mitochondrial comp...

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Autores principales: Cline, Brandon H., Costa-Nunes, Joao P., Cespuglio, Raymond, Markova, Natalyia, Santos, Ana I., Bukhman, Yury V., Kubatiev, Aslan, Steinbusch, Harry W. M., Lesch, Klaus-Peter, Strekalova, Tatyana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4341562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25767439
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00037
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author Cline, Brandon H.
Costa-Nunes, Joao P.
Cespuglio, Raymond
Markova, Natalyia
Santos, Ana I.
Bukhman, Yury V.
Kubatiev, Aslan
Steinbusch, Harry W. M.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
author_facet Cline, Brandon H.
Costa-Nunes, Joao P.
Cespuglio, Raymond
Markova, Natalyia
Santos, Ana I.
Bukhman, Yury V.
Kubatiev, Aslan
Steinbusch, Harry W. M.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
author_sort Cline, Brandon H.
collection PubMed
description Central insulin receptor-mediated signaling is attracting the growing attention of researchers because of rapidly accumulating evidence implicating it in the mechanisms of plasticity, stress response, and neuropsychiatric disorders including depression. Dicholine succinate (DS), a mitochondrial complex II substrate, was shown to enhance insulin-receptor mediated signaling in neurons and is regarded as a sensitizer of the neuronal insulin receptor. Compounds enhancing neuronal insulin receptor-mediated transmission exert an antidepressant-like effect in several pre-clinical paradigms of depression; similarly, such properties for DS were found with a stress-induced anhedonia model. Here, we additionally studied the effects of DS on several variables which were ameliorated by other insulin receptor sensitizers in mice. Pre-treatment with DS of chronically stressed C57BL6 mice rescued normal contextual fear conditioning, hippocampal gene expression of NMDA receptor subunit NR2A, the NR2A/NR2B ratio and increased REM sleep rebound after acute predation. In 18-month-old C57BL6 mice, a model of elderly depression, DS restored normal sucrose preference and activated the expression of neural plasticity factors in the hippocampus as shown by Illumina microarray. Finally, young naïve DS-treated C57BL6 mice had reduced depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors and, similarly to imipramine-treated mice, preserved hippocampal levels of the phosphorylated (inactive) form of GSK3 beta that was lowered by forced swimming in pharmacologically naïve animals. Thus, DS can ameliorate behavioral and molecular outcomes under a variety of stress- and depression-related conditions. This further highlights neuronal insulin signaling as a new factor of pathogenesis and a potential pharmacotherapy of affective pathologies.
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spelling pubmed-43415622015-03-12 Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression Cline, Brandon H. Costa-Nunes, Joao P. Cespuglio, Raymond Markova, Natalyia Santos, Ana I. Bukhman, Yury V. Kubatiev, Aslan Steinbusch, Harry W. M. Lesch, Klaus-Peter Strekalova, Tatyana Front Behav Neurosci Neuroscience Central insulin receptor-mediated signaling is attracting the growing attention of researchers because of rapidly accumulating evidence implicating it in the mechanisms of plasticity, stress response, and neuropsychiatric disorders including depression. Dicholine succinate (DS), a mitochondrial complex II substrate, was shown to enhance insulin-receptor mediated signaling in neurons and is regarded as a sensitizer of the neuronal insulin receptor. Compounds enhancing neuronal insulin receptor-mediated transmission exert an antidepressant-like effect in several pre-clinical paradigms of depression; similarly, such properties for DS were found with a stress-induced anhedonia model. Here, we additionally studied the effects of DS on several variables which were ameliorated by other insulin receptor sensitizers in mice. Pre-treatment with DS of chronically stressed C57BL6 mice rescued normal contextual fear conditioning, hippocampal gene expression of NMDA receptor subunit NR2A, the NR2A/NR2B ratio and increased REM sleep rebound after acute predation. In 18-month-old C57BL6 mice, a model of elderly depression, DS restored normal sucrose preference and activated the expression of neural plasticity factors in the hippocampus as shown by Illumina microarray. Finally, young naïve DS-treated C57BL6 mice had reduced depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors and, similarly to imipramine-treated mice, preserved hippocampal levels of the phosphorylated (inactive) form of GSK3 beta that was lowered by forced swimming in pharmacologically naïve animals. Thus, DS can ameliorate behavioral and molecular outcomes under a variety of stress- and depression-related conditions. This further highlights neuronal insulin signaling as a new factor of pathogenesis and a potential pharmacotherapy of affective pathologies. Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4341562/ /pubmed/25767439 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00037 Text en Copyright © 2015 Cline, Costa-Nunes, Cespuglio, Markova, Santos, Bukhman, Kubatiev, Steinbusch, Lesch and Strekalova. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Cline, Brandon H.
Costa-Nunes, Joao P.
Cespuglio, Raymond
Markova, Natalyia
Santos, Ana I.
Bukhman, Yury V.
Kubatiev, Aslan
Steinbusch, Harry W. M.
Lesch, Klaus-Peter
Strekalova, Tatyana
Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title_full Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title_fullStr Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title_full_unstemmed Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title_short Dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, REM sleep, hippocampal pGSK3 beta and mRNAs of NMDA receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
title_sort dicholine succinate, the neuronal insulin sensitizer, normalizes behavior, rem sleep, hippocampal pgsk3 beta and mrnas of nmda receptor subunits in mouse models of depression
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4341562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25767439
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00037
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