Linking Hypothermia and Altered Metabolism with TrkB Activation.
Okko AlitaloGemma González-HernándezMarko RosenholmPiia KohtalaNobuaki MatsuiHeidi Kaastrup MüllerWiebke TheilmannAnders KleinOlli KärkkäinenStanislav RozovTomi RantamäkiSamuel KohtalaPublished in: ACS chemical neuroscience (2023)
Many mechanisms have been proposed to explain acute antidepressant drug-induced activation of TrkB neurotrophin receptors, but several questions remain. In a series of pharmacological experiments, we observed that TrkB activation induced by antidepressants and several other drugs correlated with sedation, and most importantly, coinciding hypothermia. Untargeted metabolomics of pharmacologically dissimilar TrkB activating treatments revealed effects on shared bioenergetic targets involved in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) breakdown and synthesis, demonstrating a common perturbation in metabolic activity. Both activation of TrkB signaling and hypothermia were recapitulated by administration of inhibitors of glucose and lipid metabolism, supporting a close relationship between metabolic inhibition and neurotrophic signaling. Drug-induced TrkB phosphorylation was independent of electroencephalography slow-wave activity and remained unaltered in knock-in mice with the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) Val66Met allele, which have impaired activity-dependent BDNF release, alluding to an activation mechanism independent from BDNF and neuronal activity. Instead, we demonstrated that the active maintenance of body temperature prevents activation of TrkB and other targets associated with antidepressants, including p70S6 kinase downstream of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β). Increased TrkB, GSK3β, and p70S6K phosphorylation was also observed during recovery sleep following sleep deprivation, when a physiological temperature drop is known to occur. Our results suggest that the changes in bioenergetics and thermoregulation are causally connected to TrkB activation and may act as physiological regulators of signaling processes involved in neuronal plasticity.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- cardiac arrest
- signaling pathway
- major depressive disorder
- physical activity
- mass spectrometry
- brain injury
- protein kinase
- tyrosine kinase
- transcription factor
- liver failure
- depressive symptoms
- type diabetes
- adverse drug
- pi k akt
- insulin resistance
- high resolution
- stress induced
- sleep quality
- mouse model
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation