Abstract

Clinical and preclinical studies report the implication of 5-hydroxytryptamine 4 receptors (5-HT4Rs) in depression and anxiety. Here, we tested whether the absence of 5-HT4Rs influences the response to the antidepressant fluoxetine in mice subjected to chronic corticosterone administration, an animal model of depression and anxiety. Therefore, the effects of chronic administration of fluoxetine in corticosterone-treated wild-type (WT) and 5-HT4R knockout (KO) mice were evaluated in the open-field and novelty suppressed feeding tests. As 5-HT1A receptor (5-HT1AR) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) are critically involved in depression and anxiety, we further evaluated 5-HT1A receptor functionality by [35S]GTPγS autoradiography and BDNF mRNA expression by in situ hybridization techniques. We found that 5-HT4R KO and WT mice displayed anxiety- and depressive-like behavior following chronic administration of corticosterone, as evidenced in the open-field and novelty suppressed feeding tests. In the open-field, a decreased central activity was observed in naïve and corticosterone-treated mice of both genotypes following chronic fluoxetine administration. In the novelty suppressed feeding test, a predictive paradigm of antidepressant activity, chronic treatment with fluoxetine reverted the latency to eat in both genotypes. The antidepressant also potentiated the corticosterone-induced desensitization of the 5-HT1AR in the dorsal raphe nucleus. Further, chronic fluoxetine increased BDNF mRNA expression in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus in corticosterone-treated mice of both genotypes. Therefore, our findings indicate that the behavioral effects of fluoxetine in the corticosterone model of depression and anxiety appear not to be dependent on 5-HT4Rs.

Highlights

  • Dysfunctions of the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) system in the mammalian brain are related to the pathogenesis of depression.[1]

  • The highest concentration is found in brain areas implicated in depression- and anxiety-like behaviors, including the limbic system, and the lowest in the cerebral cortex.4−6 5HT4Rs commonly exert a positive control of the release of acetylcholine in the frontal cerebral cortex[7] and 5-HT in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN3)

  • In corticosterone-treated WT mice, 14-day treatment with fluoxetine significantly reduced OF central time (42.5%) and entries (45.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Dysfunctions of the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) system in the mammalian brain are related to the pathogenesis of depression.[1]. WT and 5-HT4R KO mice exhibited an enhanced anxiety- and depressive-like behavior following chronic administration of corticosterone as evidenced in the open-field (OF) and novelty suppressed feeding (NSF) tests.

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