Grados Marco, Salehi Mona, Lotfi Aida, Dua Sagar, Xie Isabella
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Drug Deliv. 2024 Sep 13;4:1364037. doi: 10.3389/fddev.2024.1364037. eCollection 2024.
Psychotropics are currently developed and marketed with a limited understanding of their mechanism of action. The notion that protein kinase C (PKC) activity is highly relevant to learning and memory function stems from experiments in the 1980s, which associated protein kinase alpha (pka) and pkc to animal models of associative learning, opening an area of exploration for psychotropic development. The PKC family consists of several isoforms, including PKC alpha, beta1, beta1, gamma, delta and epsilon among others. In particular, PKC gamma (PRKCG) is highly brain-expressed and is singled out as a candidate for modulation in psychiatric illness. With hundreds of identified substrates, PRKCG affects multiple pathways relevant for regulation of neuronal health. In this review, converging lines of evidence are presented in the context of psychotropic drug action, which point to downregulation of PKC activity as a potential common mechanism across several psychiatric disorders. Using this mechanism through more targeted psychotropic action may then be used to develop agents that further ameliorate psychiatric symptom expression. Psychotropics including fluoxetine, tricyclics, lithium, valproate, ketamine and others are explored in relation to their effect of PKC, finding that across all drugs examined, a downregulation with chronic-but not acute-use constitutes their putative effect in ameliorating symptoms. This effect is compounded by findings that suggest that PKCs, and PRKCG in particular, promote neuroplastic effects by their downregulation. This effect is in contrast to PKC activators, which have been used in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease. Cross-disorder mechanisms need to continue to be explored in neuropsychiatric illness and targeted treatments developed in turn to address treatment-resistant conditions.
目前,精神药物在研发和上市时,人们对其作用机制的了解有限。蛋白激酶C(PKC)活性与学习和记忆功能高度相关这一概念源于20世纪80年代的实验,这些实验将蛋白激酶α(PKA)和PKC与联想学习的动物模型联系起来,开启了精神药物研发的探索领域。PKC家族由几种亚型组成,包括PKCα、β1、β1、γ、δ和ε等。特别是,PKCγ(PRKCG)在大脑中高度表达,并被选为精神疾病调节的候选对象。PRKCG有数百种已确定的底物,影响与神经元健康调节相关的多种途径。在这篇综述中,在精神药物作用的背景下呈现了多条证据线索,这些线索表明PKC活性下调是几种精神疾病潜在的共同机制。通过更有针对性的精神药物作用利用这一机制,可能会用于开发进一步改善精神症状表现的药物。探讨了包括氟西汀、三环类药物、锂盐、丙戊酸盐、氯胺酮等在内的精神药物对PKC的影响,发现在所研究的所有药物中,长期使用而非急性使用导致的下调构成了它们改善症状的假定作用。这一效应因以下发现而更加复杂,即PKC,尤其是PRKCG,通过其下调促进神经可塑性效应。这一效应与用于治疗阿尔茨海默病等神经退行性疾病的PKC激活剂相反。神经精神疾病中跨疾病机制仍需继续探索,并相应开发针对性治疗方法以应对难治性疾病。