Department of Physical Therapy, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Bone. 2010 Apr;46(4):985-92. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2009.12.031. Epub 2010 Jan 6.
Popular psychotropic drugs, like the antidepressant selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), and the mood stabilizer lithium, may have skeletal effects. In particular, preclinical observations suggest a direct negative effect of SSRIs on the skeleton. A potential caveat in studies of the skeletal effects of psychotropic drugs is the hypoactive (skeletal unloading) phenotype they induce. The aim of this study was to investigate the contribution of physical inactivity to the skeletal effects of psychotropic drugs by studying bone changes in cage control and tail suspended mice treated with either vehicle, SSRI, TCA or lithium. Tail suspension was used to control for drug differences on physical activity levels by normalizing skeletal loading between groups. The psychotropic drugs were found to have contrasting skeletal effects which were independent of drug effects on animal physical activity levels. The latter was evident by an absence of statistical interactions between the activity and drug groups. Pharmacological inhibition of the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) transporter (5-HTT) using a SSRI reduced in vivo gains in lower extremity BMD, and negatively altered ex vivo measures of femoral and spinal bone density, architecture and mechanical properties. These effects were mediated by a decrease in bone formation without a change in bone resorption suggesting that the SSRI had anti-anabolic skeletal effects. In contrast, glycogen synthase kinase-3[beta] (GSK-3[beta]) inhibition using lithium had anabolic effects improving in vivo gains in BMD via an increase in bone formation, while TCA-mediated inhibition of the norepinephrine transporter had minimal skeletal effect. The observed negative skeletal effect of 5-HTT inhibition, combined with recent findings of direct and indirect effects of 5-HT on bone formation, are of interest given the frequent prescription of SSRIs for the treatment of depression and other affective disorders. Likewise, the anabolic effect of GSK-3[beta] inhibition using lithium reconfirms the importance of Wnt/beta-catenin signaling in the skeleton and it's targeting by recent drug discovery efforts. In conclusion, the current study demonstrates that different psychotropic drugs with differing underlying mechanisms of action have contrasting skeletal effects and that these effects do not result indirectly via the generation of animal physical inactivity.
常用精神类药物,如抗抑郁药选择性 5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRIs)和三环抗抑郁药(TCAs),以及心境稳定剂锂,可能对骨骼有影响。特别是,临床前观察表明 SSRIs 对骨骼有直接的负面影响。在研究精神类药物对骨骼的影响时,一个潜在的问题是它们会导致动物活动减少(骨骼卸载)。本研究旨在通过研究接受对照笼养、尾部悬吊和接受 SSRI、TCA 或锂治疗的小鼠的骨骼变化,来研究非运动活动对精神类药物对骨骼影响的作用。通过将各组骨骼负荷标准化,尾部悬吊被用来控制药物对动物活动水平的差异。结果发现,这些精神类药物对骨骼有不同的影响,且与药物对动物活动水平的影响无关。后者通过活动和药物组之间不存在统计学相互作用而得到证实。使用 SSRI 抑制 5-羟色胺(5-HT)转运体(5-HTT)会降低下肢骨密度的体内增加,并且会对股骨和脊柱骨密度、结构和机械性能的体外测量值产生负面影响。这些影响是通过骨形成减少而没有骨吸收变化来介导的,表明 SSRI 具有抗合成代谢的骨骼作用。相比之下,使用锂抑制糖原合酶激酶-3β(GSK-3β)具有合成代谢作用,通过增加骨形成来提高骨密度的体内增加,而 TCA 介导的去甲肾上腺素转运体抑制对骨骼几乎没有影响。鉴于 SSRIs 常用于治疗抑郁症和其他情感障碍,因此 5-HTT 抑制的观察到的负性骨骼作用,以及最近发现 5-HT 对骨形成的直接和间接作用,具有重要意义。同样,使用锂抑制 GSK-3β 产生的合成代谢作用也再次证实了 Wnt/β-连环蛋白信号通路在骨骼中的重要性,以及最近药物发现工作对其的靶向作用。总之,本研究表明,具有不同作用机制的不同精神类药物具有不同的骨骼作用,这些作用不是通过产生动物非运动活动而间接产生的。