4.4 Article

Ketamine elicits sustained antidepressant-like activity via a serotonin-dependent mechanism

Journal

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 228, Issue 1, Pages 157-166

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-013-3024-x

Keywords

Antidepressant; Behaviour; Depression; Forced swimming test; Ketamine; NMDA receptor; Serotonin

Funding

  1. Health Research Board of Ireland

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Behavioural antidepressant-like effects of ketamine have been reported in the forced swimming test (FST). The mechanisms mediating such effects are unknown. As serotonin (5-HT) is an important transmitter mediating antidepressant responsiveness in the FST, the influence of 5-HT depletion on the antidepressant-like effect of ketamine was assessed. The effect of ketamine (25 mg/kg, i.p., 1 or 24 h prior to test) was assessed in the FST in naive rats or animals subjected to 5-HT depletion, repeated stress or following a combination of 5-HT depletion and stress. Endogenous 5-HT was depleted using the tryptophan hydroxylase inhibitor para-chlorophenylalanine (3 x 150 mg/kg, i.p.). Stress was induced by physical restraint (2 h/day for 10 days). In naive rats, ketamine administered 24 or 1 h prior to test produced a characteristic antidepressant-like reduction in immobility time in the FST. Depletion of 5-HT blocked this reduction in immobility when ketamine was administered 24 h prior FST, indicative of 5-HT dependency. The increase in immobility provoked by repeated restraint stress (2 h/day for 10 days) was blocked by ketamine when administered 24 h prior to FST, but this effect dissipated when animals were subjected to 5-HT depletion. These observations are consistent with a role for 5-HT in mediating sustained antidepressant activity of ketamine in the FST. Molecular and cellular changes induced by ketamine may produce a rapid adaptation of 5-HT transmission which underlies the antidepressant response.

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