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Escitalopram reduces increased hippocampal cytogenesis in a genetic rat depression model.

Author

  • Åsa Petersén
  • Gitta Wörtwein
  • Susanne H M Gruber
  • Aleksander A Mathé

Summary, in English

Hippocampal neurogenesis is potentially implicated in etiology of depression and as the final common mechanism underlying antidepressant treatments. However, decreased neurogenesis has not been demonstrated in depressed patients and, in animals, reduced cytogenesis was shown in healthy rats exposed to stressors, but, so far, not in models of depression. Here we report that the number of BrdU positive cells in hippocampus was (1) significantly higher in a rat model of depression, the Flinders Sensitive Line (FSL) compared to control FRL, (2) increased in both FSL and FRL following maternal separation, (3) reduced by escitalopram treatment in maternally separated animals to the level found in non-separated animals. These results argue against the prevailing hypothesis that adult cytogenesis is reduced in depression and that the common mechanism underlying antidepressant treatments is to increase adult cytogenesis. The results also point to the importance of using a disease model and not healthy animals for testing effects of potential treatments for human depression and suggest other cellular mechanisms of action than those that had previously been proposed for escitalopram.

Publishing year

2008

Language

English

Pages

305-308

Publication/Series

Neuroscience Letters

Volume

436

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Neurosciences

Status

Published

Research group

  • Translational Neuroendocrinology

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0304-3940