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Acid sphingomyelinase-ceramide system mediates effects of antidepressant drugs

Authors :
Erich Gulbins
Christoph Böhmer
Philipp Tripal
Teja W. Groemer
Anja Lüth
Johannes van Brederode
Martin Reichel
Undine E. Lang
Christian P. Müller
Michael Weller
Teresa F. Ackermann
Monica Palmada
Christian Alzheimer
Johannes Kornhuber
Heike Grassmé
Burkhard Kleuser
Carsten H. Tischbirek
Ghazaleh Tabatabai
Sven Staedtler
Davide Amato
Katrin Anne Becker
University of Zurich
Gulbins, E
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Major depression is a highly prevalent severe mood disorder that is treated with antidepressants. The molecular targets of antidepressants require definition. We investigated the role of the acid sphingomyelinase (Asm)-ceramide system as a target for antidepressants. Therapeutic concentrations of the antidepressants amitriptyline and fluoxetine reduced Asm activity and ceramide concentrations in the hippocampus, increased neuronal proliferation, maturation and survival and improved behavior in mouse models of stress-induced depression. Genetic Asm deficiency abrogated these effects. Mice overexpressing Asm, heterozygous for acid ceramidase, treated with blockers of ceramide metabolism or directly injected with C16 ceramide in the hippocampus had higher ceramide concentrations and lower rates of neuronal proliferation, maturation and survival compared with controls and showed depression-like behavior even in the absence of stress. The decrease of ceramide abundance achieved by antidepressant-mediated inhibition of Asm normalized these effects. Lowering ceramide abundance may thus be a central goal for the future development of antidepressants.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7d7f8170d1387bc67769a51a8442629