4.5 Article

Chronic nicotine, but not suramin or resveratrol, partially remediates the mania-like profile of dopamine transporter knockdown mice

Journal

EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue -, Pages 75-86

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2020.11.004

Keywords

Bipolar Disorder; Mania; Dopamine transporter; Nicotine; Suramin; Resveratrol

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 MH0104344, R01 DA043535, R01 DA44909]
  2. Veteran's Administration VISN 22 Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center

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Bipolar disorder affects 2% of the global population and current treatments are not completely effective. The disorder is characterized by fluctuations between mania and depression, possibly driven by imbalances in dopamine and acetylcholine.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe mental illness affecting 2% of the global population. Current pharmacotherapies provide incomplete symptom remediation, highlighting the need for novel therapeutics. BD is characterized by fluctuations between mania and depression, likely driven by shifts between hyperdopaminergia and hypercholinergia, respectively. Hyperdopaminergia may result from insufficient activity of the dopamine transporter (DAT), the primary mediator of synaptic dopamine clearance. The DAT knockdown (DAT KD) mouse recreates this mechanism and exhibits a highly reproducible hyperexploratory profile in the cross-species translatable Behavioral Pattern Monitor (BPM) that is: (a) consistent with that observed in BD mania patients; and (b) partially normalized by chronic lithium and valproate treatment. The DAT KD/BPM model of mania therefore exhibits high levels of face-, construct-, and predictive validity for the pre-clinical assessment of putative anti-mania drugs. Three different drug regimens - chronic nicotine (nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) agonist; 40 mg/kg/d, 26 d), subchronic suramin (anti-purinergic; 20 mg/kg, 1 x /wk, 4 wks), and subchronic resveratrol (striatal DAT upregulator; 20 mg/kg/d, 4 d) - were administered to separate cohorts of male and female DAT KDand wildtype (WT) littermate mice, and exploration was assessed in the BPM. Throughout, DAT KD mice exhibited robust hyperexploratory profiles relative to WTs. Nicotine partially normalized this behavior. Resveratrol modestly upregulated DAT expression but did not normalize DAT KD behavior. These results support the mania-like profile of DAT KD mice, which may be partially remediated by nAChR agonists via restoration of disrupted catecholaminergic/cholinergic equilibrium. Delineating the precise mechanism of action of nicotine could identify more selective therapeutic targets. (c) 2020 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.

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