Kristen Ray - USD Biology
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Transcript Kristen Ray - USD Biology
OCD
Neurochemical dysfunction (abnormalities in
serotonin (5-HT), dopamine (DA), and
glutamatergic transmitter systems)
Drug Therapy in OCD
Strategies targeting these systems
Role of serotonin (5-HT) neurotransmitter system
and glutamatergic system
SSRIs
Block action of 5HT transporter (5-HTT)
protein
Responsible for uptake of intrasynaptic 5-HT
released following an action potential
Prevent reuptake of 5-HT into the pre-synaptic
neuron
More serotonin left in synapse to bind with postsynaptic receptors
Serotonin receptors are activated by 5-HT
Receptors modulate the release of many
neurotransmitters, including glutamate, GABA,
dopamine, epinephrine/norepinephrine, and
acetylcholine, as well as many hormones.
Influence biological and neurological processes
such as aggression, anxiety, appetite, cognition,
learning, and memory
Targeting 5-HT receptor subtypes
Drugs that block the 5-HT2 family of receptors
Augment action of SSRIs or have therapeutic
efficacy by themselves
Blockade of 5-HT2A receptors and activation of
non-5HT2A receptors may have similar effects
Synergistic treatment with 5-HT2A antagonist/SSRI
combination
Risperidone
Potent 5-HT2A antagonist
blocks α2 adrenoreceptors
Presynaptic heteroreceptors on 5-HT neurons that
regulate release of 5-HT
Further enhance SSRI therapy through desensitization
of 5-HT1D terminal autoreceptor
5-HT2C receptor agonism
Psilocybin; mixed 5-HT2C/2A/1A receptor agonist
5-H1D/B receptor
Regulate release of 5-HT from presynaptic
terminal by reducing 5-HT neurotransmission
Activation of 5-HT1D/B receptor by an agonist
compound worsen OCD symptoms
Chronic deficits in 5-HT functioning
Agonist m-CPP
Silent polymorphism of G861C gene
5-HT1D/B receptors supersensitive, resulting in
chronic reductions in synaptic levels of 5-HT
5-HT1D/B antagonist compounds expected to
hasten onset of therapeutic action of SSRIs in
OCD
rapidly producing state of 5-HT1D/B receptor
insensitivity
Glutamatergic System
Glutamate
most abundant excitatory neurotransmitter in the vertebrate nervous
system.
Nerve impulses trigger release of glutamate from pre-synaptic cell
Opposing post-synaptic cell, glutamate receptors
(NMDA receptors)
Role in synaptic plasticity
learning and memory in the brain
Glutamate transporters rapidly remove glutamate from extracellular space
In brain injury or disease, work in reverse and excess glutamate
accumulates outside cells
Causes calcium ions to enter cells via NMDA receptor channels
Excitotoxicity- overstimulation of receptors leads to neuronal
damage and eventual cell death
“The Combined Effects of
Memantine and Fluoxetine
on an Animal Model of
Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder”
Effective class of drugs used to treat OCD
Fluoxetine
First in a generation of SSRIs for treatment of major
depressive disorder and anxiety disorders (OCD)
Good overall safety and tolerability
Better than most other antidepressants
Memantine
First used in treatment of Alzheimer’s dementia
low-affinity voltage-dependent antagonist at
glutamatergic NMDA receptors
Uncompetitive antagonist channel blocker
Aim of Study
Use mouse model of OCD
Examine whether a synergistic, as opposed to
additive relationship between NMDA antagonists
and SSRIs in treatment of OCD
Combining relatively low doses of both drugs
Low enough where do not decrease compulsive behavior when
administered alone
Isobologram
Graph of equally effective dose pairs
(isoboles) for a single effect level
Particular effect level is selected
50% of the maximum
Doses of drug A and drug B (each alone) that give
this effect are plotted as axial points in a Cartesian
plot
Straight line connecting A and B is the locus of
points (dose pairs) that will produce this effect in a
simply additive combination
Line of additivity allows a comparison with the actual
dose pair that produces this effect level experimentally
Isobologram
Third point plotted on graph
Combination points below the line of additivity
Synergism
Combination points along line of additivity
dose combinations of two drugs necessary to produce same
effect size
Simply Additive
Combination points above line of additivity
Subadditivity
Method
Male Swiss Webster mice
18-63 g depending on age
Kept at 68 to 72 °F in 12h/12h light-dark cycle
Ad libitum access to water and food pellets
Scratching Assay
Established as effective model
compulsive behavior in dogs with allergic
dermatitis
Intradermal injection in mice
Serotonin
Compound 48-80
Promotes histamine release and mast cell degranulation
Effect of fluoxetine on serotonin-induced scratching
compared to controls
Effect of memantine on serotonin-induced scratching
compared to controls
5,10,15,30 mg/kg
Effect of combination fluoxetine and memantine on
serotonin-induced scratching
5,10,15,30 mg/kg
5mg/kg fluoxetine
5mg/kg memantine
Effect of fluoxetine (10 mg/kg) and memantine (5
mg/kg) by compound 48-80 both alone and in
combination
Experimental mice
intraperitoneal injection of varying doses of
fluoxetine and/or memantine in saline (0.9% NaCl)
containing ascorbic acid (1mg/ml)
Control mice
Intraperitoneal injection of varying doses of saline
and ascorbic acid
0.1ml/10g of body weight
5 minutes later
Control and experimental mice subcutaneously
injected behind neck
0.1 ml of 0.4 mg/ml serotonin or 0.1 ml of compound
48-80 1 mg/ml in saline and ascorbic acid to induce
scratching
Each mouse then placed individually in
separate cage paired with control mouse in
separate cage given saline pretreatment
Cumulative number of scratches counted
continuously using manual counter
Cumulative scratches recorded every 5
minutes for 30 minutes
Other behaviors noted
motor activity, sedation, licking, and rearing
Statistical Analysis
Mean scratching scores for pretreated mice
compared to their saline controls
Cumulative scratches in mice injected with
drug were expressed as % of scratches
compared to saline controls
Results
Discussion
Combined doses of fluoxetine and memantine
required to produce 90% reduction in
scratching
much lower than doses of either drug alone
necessary to produce same effect
Synergistic relationship
Present study mechanisms most likely serotonergic and
glutamatergic
Basis for synergism between fluoxetine and
memantine
SSRIs increase amount of serotonin in synapses and
NMDA antagonist block glutamate binding at NMDA
receptors
Both decreased serotonergic activity and increased
glutamatergic activity have been linked to the
expression of impulsive behaviors