The molecular and cellular mechanisms of depression: a focus on reward circuitry.
Megan E FoxMary Kay LoboPublished in: Molecular psychiatry (2019)
Depression is a complex disorder that takes an enormous toll on individual health. As affected individuals display a wide variation in their clinical symptoms, the precise neural mechanisms underlying the development of depression remain elusive. Although it is impossible to phenocopy every symptom of human depression in rodents, the preclinical field has had great success in modeling some of the core affective and neurovegetative depressive symptoms, including social withdrawal, anhedonia, and weight loss. Adaptations in select cell populations may underlie these individual depressive symptoms and new tools have expanded our ability to monitor and manipulate specific cell types. This review outlines some of the most recent preclinical discoveries on the molecular and neurophysiological mechanisms in reward circuitry that underlie the expression of behavioral constructs relevant to depressive symptoms.
Keyphrases
- depressive symptoms
- sleep quality
- social support
- cell therapy
- weight loss
- healthcare
- single cell
- mental health
- public health
- endothelial cells
- stem cells
- single molecule
- skeletal muscle
- body mass index
- risk assessment
- roux en y gastric bypass
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- insulin resistance
- patient reported
- binding protein
- gastric bypass
- pluripotent stem cells