灵霉素
心理学
抗抑郁药
神经科学
神经可塑性
心情
联想学习
重性抑郁障碍
认知
氯胺酮
前额叶皮质
致幻剂
临床心理学
海马体
精神科
作者
Justyna K. Hinchcliffe,Sarah A. Stuart,Christian M. Wood,Julia M. Bartlett,Katie Kamenish,Roberto Arban,Christopher W. Thomas,Aslihan Selimbeyoglu,Shaun Hurley,Bastian Hengerer,Gary Gilmour,Emma Robinson
标识
DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.adi2403
摘要
How rapid-acting antidepressants (RAADs), such as ketamine, induce immediate and sustained improvements in mood in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) is poorly understood. A core feature of MDD is the prevalence of cognitive processing biases associated with negative affective states, and the alleviation of negative affective biases may be an index of response to drug treatment. Here, we used an affective bias behavioral test in rats, based on an associative learning task, to investigate the effects of RAADs. To generate an affective bias, animals learned to associate two different digging substrates with a food reward in the presence or absence of an affective state manipulation. A choice between the two reward-associated digging substrates was used to quantify the affective bias generated. Acute treatment with the RAADs ketamine, scopolamine, or psilocybin selectively attenuated a negative affective bias in the affective bias test. Low, but not high, doses of ketamine and psilocybin reversed the valence of the negative affective bias 24 hours after RAAD treatment. Only treatment with psilocybin, but not ketamine or scopolamine, led to a positive affective bias that was dependent on new learning and memory formation. The relearning effects of ketamine were dependent on protein synthesis localized to the rat medial prefrontal cortex and could be modulated by cue reactivation, consistent with experience-dependent neural plasticity. These findings suggest a neuropsychological mechanism that may explain both the acute and sustained effects of RAADs, potentially linking their effects on neural plasticity with affective bias modulation in a rodent model.
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