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Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects

Several drugs have recently been reported to induce rapid antidepressant effects in clinical trials and rodent models. Although the cellular mechanisms involved remain unclear, reports suggest that increased glutamate transmission contributes to these effects. Here, we demonstrate that the antidepre...

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Autores principales: Chowdhury, Golam M. I., Zhang, Jie, Thomas, Monique, Banasr, Mounira, Ma, Xiaoxian, Pittman, Brian, Bristow, Linda, Schaeffer, Eric, Duman, Ronald, Rothman, Douglas, Behar, Kevin, Sanacora, Gerard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5345902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27067013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mp.2016.34
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author Chowdhury, Golam M. I.
Zhang, Jie
Thomas, Monique
Banasr, Mounira
Ma, Xiaoxian
Pittman, Brian
Bristow, Linda
Schaeffer, Eric
Duman, Ronald
Rothman, Douglas
Behar, Kevin
Sanacora, Gerard
author_facet Chowdhury, Golam M. I.
Zhang, Jie
Thomas, Monique
Banasr, Mounira
Ma, Xiaoxian
Pittman, Brian
Bristow, Linda
Schaeffer, Eric
Duman, Ronald
Rothman, Douglas
Behar, Kevin
Sanacora, Gerard
author_sort Chowdhury, Golam M. I.
collection PubMed
description Several drugs have recently been reported to induce rapid antidepressant effects in clinical trials and rodent models. Although the cellular mechanisms involved remain unclear, reports suggest that increased glutamate transmission contributes to these effects. Here, we demonstrate that the antidepressant-like efficacy of three unique drugs, with reported rapid onset antidepressant properties, is coupled with a rapid transient rise in glutamate cycling in medial prefronal cortex (mPFC) of awake rats as measured by ex vivo (1)H-[(13)C]-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Rats were acutely pre-treated by intraperitoneal injection with a single dose of ketamine (1,3,10,30,80mg/kg), Ro 25-6981 (1,3,10mg/kg), scopolamine (5,25,100μg/kg) or vehicle (controls). At fixed times after drug injection animals received an intravenous infusion of [1,6-(13)C(2)]glucose for 8 min to enrich brain amino acid pools with (13)C, followed by rapid euthanasia. The mPFC was dissected, extracted with ethanol and metabolite (13)C enrichments measured. We found a clear dose dependent effect of ketamine and Ro 25-6981 on behavior and the percent of (13)C-enrichment of glutamate, glutamine and GABA. Further, we also found an effect of scopolamine on both cycling and behavior. These studies demonstrate that three pharmacologically distinct classes of drugs, clinically related through their reported rapid antidepressant actions, share the common ability to rapidly stimulate glutamate cycling at doses pertinent for their antidepressant-like efficacy. We conclude that increased cycling precedes the antidepressant action at behaviorally effective doses and suggests the rapid change in cycling could be used to predict efficacy of novel agents or identify doses with antidepressant activity.
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spelling pubmed-53459022017-03-13 Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects Chowdhury, Golam M. I. Zhang, Jie Thomas, Monique Banasr, Mounira Ma, Xiaoxian Pittman, Brian Bristow, Linda Schaeffer, Eric Duman, Ronald Rothman, Douglas Behar, Kevin Sanacora, Gerard Mol Psychiatry Article Several drugs have recently been reported to induce rapid antidepressant effects in clinical trials and rodent models. Although the cellular mechanisms involved remain unclear, reports suggest that increased glutamate transmission contributes to these effects. Here, we demonstrate that the antidepressant-like efficacy of three unique drugs, with reported rapid onset antidepressant properties, is coupled with a rapid transient rise in glutamate cycling in medial prefronal cortex (mPFC) of awake rats as measured by ex vivo (1)H-[(13)C]-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Rats were acutely pre-treated by intraperitoneal injection with a single dose of ketamine (1,3,10,30,80mg/kg), Ro 25-6981 (1,3,10mg/kg), scopolamine (5,25,100μg/kg) or vehicle (controls). At fixed times after drug injection animals received an intravenous infusion of [1,6-(13)C(2)]glucose for 8 min to enrich brain amino acid pools with (13)C, followed by rapid euthanasia. The mPFC was dissected, extracted with ethanol and metabolite (13)C enrichments measured. We found a clear dose dependent effect of ketamine and Ro 25-6981 on behavior and the percent of (13)C-enrichment of glutamate, glutamine and GABA. Further, we also found an effect of scopolamine on both cycling and behavior. These studies demonstrate that three pharmacologically distinct classes of drugs, clinically related through their reported rapid antidepressant actions, share the common ability to rapidly stimulate glutamate cycling at doses pertinent for their antidepressant-like efficacy. We conclude that increased cycling precedes the antidepressant action at behaviorally effective doses and suggests the rapid change in cycling could be used to predict efficacy of novel agents or identify doses with antidepressant activity. 2016-04-12 2017-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5345902/ /pubmed/27067013 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mp.2016.34 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Chowdhury, Golam M. I.
Zhang, Jie
Thomas, Monique
Banasr, Mounira
Ma, Xiaoxian
Pittman, Brian
Bristow, Linda
Schaeffer, Eric
Duman, Ronald
Rothman, Douglas
Behar, Kevin
Sanacora, Gerard
Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title_full Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title_fullStr Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title_full_unstemmed Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title_short Transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat PFC is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
title_sort transiently increased glutamate cycling in rat pfc is associated with rapid onset of antidepressant-like effects
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5345902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27067013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mp.2016.34
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