Low-down on how Prozac knocks depression on the headScientists have discovered part of the process through which antidepressants boost mood. Writing in the journal Neuron, University of Paris-Sud scientist Denis David and his colleagues explain how they first made mice depressed by chronically administering doses of cortisol, a stress hormone, and then treated the animals with the depression-drug Prozac (fluoxetine). The scientists assessed how the animals' approached a series of tasks both while they were depressed and then after antidepressant treatment. The tests included measuring the animals' eagerness to walk across open spaces, their appetites and how well they groomed themselves.
These genes were switched back on by the antidepressant treatment. Mice engineered to lack one of these genes - beta-arrestin-2 - subsequently failed to respond in the behavioural tasks to fluoxetine treatment, indicating that fluoextine exerts its effects through this gene. Importantly, however, fluoextine also boosts the production of new nerve cells in a brain region called the hippocampus, and when the scientists blocked this process they found that the depressed mice failed to improve in some of the behavioural tasks. This suggests that there are two mechanisms through which drugs like Prozac exert their effects: one, by activating certain genes, and two, by provoking the birth of new nerve cells that in some way help to patch up the neurological problem that is triggering low mood. Teasing the two effects apart is the next challenge. "The big unanswered question is whether future drugs that directly stimulate neurogenesis will be as effective as antidepressants or will only ameliorate cognitive defects," says co-author Rene Hen. 30th May 2009 |
||||
Information presented on this website is the opinion of the individual contributors and does not reflect the general views of the administrators, editors, moderators, sponsors, Cambridge University or the public at large. The contents of this site are © The Naked Scientists® 2000-2012. The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks.
|
||||