Abstract

ABSTRACTIntroduction Disturbances of circadian rhythms are a key symptom of mood and anxiety disorders. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) - commonly used antidepressant drugs – also modulate aspects of circadian rhythmicity. However, their potential to restore circadian disturbances in depression remains to be investigated.Materials and methods The effects of the SSRI fluoxetine on genetically based, depression-related circadian disruptions at the behavioral and molecular level were examined using mice selectively bred for high anxiety-related and co-segregating depression-like behavior (HAB) and normal anxiety/depression behavior mice (NAB).Results The length of the circadian period was increased in fluoxetine-treated HAB as compared to NAB mice while the number of activity bouts and light-induced entrainment were comparable. No difference in hippocampal Cry2 expression, previously reported to be dysbalanced in untreated HAB mice, was observed, while Per2 and Per3 mRNA levels were higher in HAB mice under fluoxetine treatment.Discussion The present findings provide evidence that fluoxetine treatment normalizes disrupted circadian locomotor activity and clock gene expression in a genetic mouse model of high trait anxiety and depression. An interaction between the molecular mechanisms mediating the antidepressant response to fluoxetine and the endogenous regulation of circadian rhythms in genetically based mood and anxiety disorders is proposed.

Highlights

  • Disturbances of circadian rhythms are a key symptom of mood and anxiety disorders

  • In order to investigate whether genetically based trait anxiety and co-morbid depression determine potential effects of the Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) fluoxetine on circadian behavior, wheel-running activity rhythms were compared between high anxiety-related and co-segregating depression-like behavior (HAB) and normal anxiety/depression behavior mice (NAB) mice under chronic fluoxetine treatment

  • The daily amount of wheel-running activity was comparable between HAB and NAB mice during inactive and active phases of the circadian cycle under both light: dark cycle (LD) (p40.05, Figure 2c) and DD (p40.05, Figure 2d) conditions suggesting that the significant differences in tau do not result from alterations in overall locomotor activity

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Summary

Introduction

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) - commonly used antidepressant drugs – modulate aspects of circadian rhythmicity. Their potential to restore circadian disturbances in depression remains to be investigated. Materials and methods The effects of the SSRI fluoxetine on genetically based, depression-related circadian disruptions at the behavioral and molecular level were examined using mice selectively bred for high anxiety-related and co-segregating depression-like behavior (HAB) and normal anxiety/depression behavior mice (NAB). Psychiatric illnesses including mood and anxiety disorders are often associated with dysregulation of circadian rhythms, such as sleep disturbances (DSM-V 2013; ICD-10 1992, Version 2015) [1,2].

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