Deltheil T, Guiard B P, Cerdan J, David D J, Tanaka K F, Repérant C, Guilloux J-P, Coudoré F, Hen R, Gardier A M
Laboratoire de Neuropharmacologie, Université Paris-Sud, EA 3544, Faculté de Pharmacie, 5, rue J.B. Clément, Tour D1, 2e etage, Châtenay-Malabry Cedex F-92296, France.
Neuropharmacology. 2008 Nov;55(6):1006-14. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2008.08.001. Epub 2008 Aug 12.
Antidepressants such as Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) act as indirect agonists of serotonin (5-HT) receptors. Although these drugs produce a rapid blockade of serotonin transporters (SERTs) in vitro, several weeks of treatment are necessary to observe clinical benefits. This paradox has not been solved yet. Recent studies have identified modifications of intracellular signaling proteins and target genes that could contribute to antidepressant-like activity of SSRI (e.g., increases in neurogenesis and BDNF protein levels), and may explain, at least in part, their long delay of action. Although these data suggest a positive regulation of 5-HT on the expression of the gene coding for BDNF, the reciprocal effects of BDNF on brain 5-HT neurotransmission remains poorly documented. To study the impact of BDNF on serotonergic activity, a dual experimental strategy was used to analyze neurochemical and behavioral consequences of its decrease (strategy 1) or increase (strategy 2) in the brain of adult male mice. (1) In heterozygous BDNF+/- mice in which brain BDNF protein levels were decreased by half, an enhancement of basal extracellular 5-HT levels (5-HText) that induced a down-regulation of SERT, i.e., a decrease in its capacity to reuptake 5-HT, was found in the hippocampus. In addition, the SSRI, paroxetine, failed to increase hippocampal 5-HText in BDNF+/- mice, while it produces robust effects in wild-type littermates. Thus, BDNF+/- mice can be viewed as an animal model of genetic resistance to serotonergic antidepressant drugs. (2) In wild-type BDNF+/+ mice, the effects of intra-hippocampal (vHi) injection of BDNF (100 ng) in combination with a SSRI was examined by using intracerebral microdialysis and behavioral paradigms that predict an antidepressant- and anxiolytic-like activity of a molecule [the forced swim test (FST) and the open field paradigm (OF) respectively]. BDNF induced a rapid and transient increase in paroxetine response on 5-HText in the adult hippocampus, which was correlated with a potentiation of its antidepressant-like activity in the FST. The effects of BDNF were selectively blocked by K252a, an antagonist of its high-affinity TrkB receptor. Such a correlation between neurochemical and behavioral effects of [BDNF+SSRI] co-administration suggests that its antidepressant-like activity is linked to the activation of 5-HT neurotransmission in the adult hippocampus. BDNF also had a facilitatory effect on anxiety-like behavior in the OF test, and paroxetine prevented this anxiogenesis. What was the mechanism by which BDNF exerted these latter effects? Surprisingly, by using zero net flux method of quantitative microdialysis in vivo, we found that an intra-hippocampal BDNF injection in wild-type mice decreased the functional activity of SERT as observed in BDNF+/- mice. However, the decreased capacity of SERT to reuptake 5-HT was not associated to an increase in basal 5-HText in the hippocampus of WT mice. Interestingly, using in situ hybridization experiments indicated that TrkB receptor mRNA was expressed in the hippocampus and dorsal raphe nucleus in adult mice suggesting that the neurochemical and behavioral effects of intra-hippocampal BDNF injection can mobilize both pre- and post-synaptic elements of the brain 5-HT neurotransmission. Taken together, these set of experiments unveiled a relative opposition of neurochemical and behavioral responses following either a decrease (in BDNF+/- mutant mice) or an increase in brain BDNF levels (bilateral intra-hippocampal injection) in adult mice. In view of developing new antidepressant drug strategy, a poly-therapy combining BDNF with a chronic SSRI treatment could thus improve the efficacy of current medications.
选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)等抗抑郁药可作为5-羟色胺(5-HT)受体的间接激动剂。尽管这些药物在体外能迅速阻断5-羟色胺转运体(SERTs),但通常需要数周治疗才能观察到临床疗效。这一矛盾现象至今尚未得到解决。最近的研究发现,细胞内信号蛋白和靶基因的改变可能与SSRI的抗抑郁样活性有关(例如,神经发生增加和脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)蛋白水平升高),这可能至少部分解释了其作用延迟较长的原因。尽管这些数据表明5-HT对BDNF编码基因的表达具有正向调节作用,但BDNF对脑5-HT神经传递的反向作用仍缺乏充分的文献记载。为了研究BDNF对5-羟色胺能活性的影响,我们采用了双重实验策略,分析成年雄性小鼠脑内BDNF减少(策略1)或增加(策略2)后的神经化学和行为学后果。(1)在杂合子BDNF+/-小鼠中,脑内BDNF蛋白水平降低了一半,结果发现海马体中基础细胞外5-HT水平(5-HText)升高,导致SERT下调,即其再摄取5-HT的能力下降。此外,SSRI帕罗西汀在BDNF+/-小鼠中未能增加海马体5-HText,而在野生型同窝小鼠中却能产生显著效果。因此,BDNF+/-小鼠可被视为对5-羟色胺能抗抑郁药产生遗传抗性的动物模型。(2)在野生型BDNF+/+小鼠中,通过脑微透析和行为学范式(分别为强迫游泳试验(FST)和旷场试验(OF),用于预测分子的抗抑郁样和抗焦虑样活性),研究了海马内(vHi)注射BDNF(100 ng)与SSRI联合使用的效果。BDNF在成年海马体中诱导帕罗西汀对5-HText的反应迅速且短暂增加,这与FST中其抗抑郁样活性的增强相关。BDNF的作用被其高亲和力TrkB受体拮抗剂K252a选择性阻断。[BDNF+SSRI]联合给药的神经化学和行为学效应之间的这种相关性表明,其抗抑郁样活性与成年海马体中5-HT神经传递的激活有关。BDNF在OF试验中对焦虑样行为也有促进作用,而帕罗西汀可预防这种焦虑发生。BDNF发挥这些后期作用的机制是什么?令人惊讶的是,通过在体内使用定量微透析的零净通量方法,我们发现野生型小鼠海马内注射BDNF后,SERT的功能活性降低,这与BDNF+/-小鼠中的情况类似。然而,WT小鼠海马体中SERT再摄取5-HT能力的降低与基础5-HText的增加无关。有趣的是,原位杂交实验表明,成年小鼠海马体和中缝背核中表达TrkB受体mRNA,这表明海马内注射BDNF的神经化学和行为学效应可调动脑5-HT神经传递的突触前和突触后元件。综上所述,这一系列实验揭示了成年小鼠脑内BDNF水平降低(BDNF+/-突变小鼠)或增加(双侧海马内注射)后神经化学和行为反应的相对对立性。鉴于开发新的抗抑郁药物策略,将BDNF与慢性SSRI治疗联合使用的多药疗法可能会提高当前药物的疗效。