Low Doses of Ketamine and Melatonin in Combination Produce Additive Antidepressant-like Effects in Mice.
Rosa Estrada-ReyesDaniel B Quero-ChávezCitlali TruetaArmida MirandaMarcela Valdés-TovarSalvador Alarcón-ElizaldeJulián Oikawa-SalaJesús ArguetaLuis A Constantino-JonapaJesús Muñoz-EstradaMargarita L DubocovichGloria A Benítez-KingPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Major depressive disorder is a disabling disease with the number of affected individuals increasing each year. Current antidepressant treatments take between three to six weeks to be effective with forty percent of patients being resistant to treatment, making it necessary to search for new antidepressant treatments. Ketamine, a phencyclidine hydrochloride derivative, given intravenously, induces a rapid antidepressant effect in humans. In mice, it causes increased neurogenesis and antidepressant-like effects. However, it also produces psychomimetic effects in humans and in rodents increases the locomotor activity. In contrast, melatonin, a hormone secreted by the pineal gland and synthesized in extrapineal sites, increases new neuron formation and causes antidepressant-like effects in adult rodents with no collateral effects. Here, we assessed the effects of a non-effective dose of ketamine in combination with melatonin (KET/MEL), both on neurogenesis as well as on the antidepressant-like effect in mice. Our results showed that KET/MEL combination increased neurogenesis and produced antidepressant-like effects without altering locomotor activity after both single and triple administration protocols. Our data strongly suggest that KET/MEL combination could be used to simultaneously promote neurogenesis, reverting neuronal atrophy and inducing antidepressant-like effects.
Keyphrases
- major depressive disorder
- bipolar disorder
- spinal cord injury
- chronic kidney disease
- type diabetes
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- magnetic resonance imaging
- metabolic syndrome
- machine learning
- computed tomography
- pain management
- smoking cessation
- electronic health record
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- water soluble
- chronic pain