Department of Neuroscience, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-9111.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-9111
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Jun 10;111(23):8649-54. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1323920111. Epub 2014 May 27.
Ketamine is an NMDA receptor (NMDAR) antagonist that elicits rapid antidepressant responses in patients with treatment-resistant depression. However, ketamine can also produce psychotomimetic effects that limit its utility as an antidepressant, raising the question of whether the clinically tolerated NMDAR antagonist memantine possesses antidepressant properties. Despite its similar potency to ketamine as an NMDAR antagonist, clinical data suggest that memantine does not exert rapid antidepressant actions for reasons that are poorly understood. In this study, we recapitulate the ketamine and memantine clinical findings in mice, showing that ketamine, but not memantine, has antidepressant-like effects in behavioral models. Using electrophysiology in cultured hippocampal neurons, we show that ketamine and memantine effectively block NMDAR-mediated miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents in the absence of Mg(2+). However, in physiological levels of extracellular Mg(2+), we identified key functional differences between ketamine and memantine in their ability to block NMDAR function at rest. This differential effect of ketamine and memantine extends to intracellular signaling coupled to NMDAR at rest, in that memantine does not inhibit the phosphorylation of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 or augment subsequent expression of BDNF, which are critical determinants of ketamine-mediated antidepressant efficacy. These results demonstrate significant differences between the efficacies of ketamine and memantine on NMDAR-mediated neurotransmission that have impacts on downstream intracellular signaling, which we hypothesize is the trigger for rapid antidepressant responses. These data provide a novel framework on the necessary functional requirements of NMDAR-mediated neurotransmission as a critical determinant necessary to elicit rapid antidepressant responses.
氯胺酮是一种 NMDA 受体(NMDAR)拮抗剂,能迅速缓解治疗抵抗性抑郁症患者的抑郁症状。然而,氯胺酮也能产生致幻作用,限制了其作为抗抑郁药的应用,这就提出了一个问题,即临床耐受的 NMDAR 拮抗剂美金刚是否具有抗抑郁作用。尽管美金刚作为 NMDAR 拮抗剂的效力与氯胺酮相似,但临床数据表明,美金刚没有产生快速的抗抑郁作用,其原因尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们在小鼠中重现了氯胺酮和美金刚的临床发现,表明氯胺酮而非美金刚在行为模型中具有抗抑郁样作用。通过培养的海马神经元中的电生理学研究,我们发现氯胺酮和美金刚在没有 Mg(2+)的情况下能有效地阻断 NMDAR 介导的微小兴奋性突触后电流。然而,在生理浓度的细胞外 Mg(2+)下,我们发现氯胺酮和美金刚在阻断 NMDAR 静息功能方面存在关键的功能差异。这种氯胺酮和美金刚的差异效应延伸到与 NMDAR 静息状态耦联的细胞内信号转导,美金刚不能抑制真核延伸因子 2 的磷酸化或增强随后 BDNF 的表达,而这是氯胺酮介导的抗抑郁疗效的关键决定因素。这些结果表明,氯胺酮和美金刚在 NMDAR 介导的神经传递中的效力存在显著差异,这些差异会影响下游的细胞内信号转导,我们假设这是快速抗抑郁反应的触发因素。这些数据为 NMDAR 介导的神经传递作为产生快速抗抑郁反应的必要决定因素提供了一个新的框架,对其必要的功能要求进行了研究。