How ketamine can change the brain to fight depression
By Maria Cohut
Fact checked by Isabel Godfrey
Fact checked by Isabel Godfrey
New research in mice, which
the National Institutes of Health supported, shows how ketamine can alter brain
circuits, quickly redressing depression-like symptoms.
Previous studies have shown
that ketamine — an anesthetic — can rapidly reduce severe symptoms of major
depressive disorder, particularly the occurrence of suicidal thoughts.
However, researchers are still
unsure how this substance acts in the brain to fight off depression or how to
maintain its therapeutic effects in the long run.
For this reason, a team of
investigators from the University of Tokyo in Japan, Stanford University in
California, and Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, NY, recently set out to
understand more about how ketamine fights depression in the brain by studying
its effect in mouse models.
This research received support
from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), who describe the work as
"basic research" that "is foundational to advancing new and
better ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease."
The study authors report their
findings in a scientific paper that appears in the journal Science.
Ketamine and brain circuitry
"Ketamine is a
potentially transformative treatment for depression, but one of the major
challenges associated with this drug is sustaining recovery after the initial
treatment," explains Dr. Conor Liston, one of the researchers behind the study.
To find out how ketamine works
in the brain and identify the mechanisms that reduce depression symptoms, the
researchers worked with mice that presented behaviors indicative of depression.
More specifically, the team
focused on dendritic spines. These are small protrusions on dendrites, which
are brain cell extensions that help the neurons "communicate" among
themselves. The dendritic spines are the parts that receive the stimuli that
other neurons send out.
The researchers studied the
dendritic spines in the prefrontal cortex of the mice's brains both before and
after they exposed some of the rodents to a source of stress. They found that
the mice demonstrating depression-like behaviors after experiencing the
stressor lost dendritic spines more quickly than the control mice. Moreover,
these mice had reduced formation of new dendritic spines.
The team also saw that
exposing experimental mice to stress led to poorer connectivity and
coordination of neural activity in the prefrontal cortex. These changes, the
researchers explain, relate to typical behaviors in depression, which occur in
response to stress.
When the researchers treated
these mice with ketamine, they found that the animals regained functional
connectivity and normal neuron activity in the prefrontal cortex, and they no
longer displayed behaviors consistent with depression.
At 24 hours after receiving
just one dose of ketamine, the rodents that the team had confronted with a
source of stress did not show depression-like symptoms. Brain scans also
revealed an increase in the formation of fully functional dendritic spines.
The authors make a distinction
between these findings. Mice that received ketamine, they explain, showed
behavioral improvements within 3 hours of treatment, but they only experienced
new dendritic spine formation between 12 and 24 hours after the treatment.
"Our results suggest that
interventions aimed at enhancing synapse formation and prolonging their
survival could be useful for maintaining the antidepressant effects of ketamine
in the days and weeks after treatment," Dr. Liston notes.
'Additional insights could
guide advances'
Although the researchers admit
that they will have to conduct more studies to understand the exact mechanisms
at play, they believe, based on their current findings, that the formation of
new dendritic spines may occur thanks to the fact that ketamine boosts brain
activity in the prefrontal cortex.
The researchers also found
that dendritic spines are likely to play an important role in maintaining the
remission of depression-like symptoms in mice. When the team tried selectively
removing newly grown dendritic spines in the mice's brains, the rodents started
expressing depression-related behaviors once again.
Dr. Janine Simmons, who leads
the National Institute of Mental Health's Social and Affective Neuroscience
Program — and who did not contribute to the current study — explains why
conducting new research into the workings of ketamine in the brain is
important.
"Ketamine," she
notes, "is the first new antidepressant medication with a novel mechanism
of action since the 1980s. Its ability to rapidly decrease suicidal thoughts is
already a fundamental breakthrough."
"Additional insights into
ketamine's longer-term effects on brain circuits could guide future advances in
the management of mood disorders."
-Dr. Janine Simmons
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
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