Abstract

Major depressive disorder is a chronic psychiatric disease with a high prevalence. Brain mechanisms for depression at cellular and molecular levels are far from clear. Increasing evidence from clinical and preclinical studies reveals critical roles of the non-receptor tyrosine kinase (nRTK) superfamily in the pathophysiology, symptomatology, and therapy of depression. To date, several nRTK members from three nRTK subfamilies, i.e., the Src family kinase (SFK), the Janus tyrosine kinase (JAK) and the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) subfamilies, may connect to the intracellular, intranuclear, and synaptic signaling network linking chronic stress to depressi- and anxiety-like behavior. These SFK/JAK/FAK nRTKs are abundantly expressed in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, two core limbic regions implicated in depression, and are enriched at synaptic sites. In various acute or chronic animal models of depression, the nRTKs were significantly altered (up- or downregulated) in their phosphorylation, expression, subcellular/subsynaptic distribution, and/or function. Stress that precipitates depressive behavior also influenced the interaction of nRTKs with other signaling molecules and downstream substrates, including ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors. The commonly-used antidepressants showed the ability to alter nRTK activity. In sum, the limbic SFK/JAK/FAK nRTKs are sensitive to stress and undergo drastic adaptations in response to chronic depression. These long-lasting adaptations contribute to the remodeling of signaling network or synaptic plasticity critical for the vulnerability to depression and the therapeutic efficacy of antidepressants.

Highlights

  • A tyrosine kinase is a protein enzyme that transfers a phosphoryl group from a nucleoside triphosphate donor, e.g., ATP, to the specific amino acid tyrosine on a protein, i.e., a posttranslational process called phosphorylation

  • We summarized roles of non-receptor tyrosine kinases (nRTK) in depression and antidepressant action

  • Several nRTK members from Src family kinase (SFK), Janus tyrosine kinase (JAK), and focal adhesion kinase (FAK) families were altered in their expression, subcellular distribution, and function in the limbic brain regions (PFC and hippocampus) implicated in depression by acute and especially chronic stress exposure

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Summary

Introduction

A tyrosine kinase is a protein enzyme that transfers a phosphoryl group from a nucleoside triphosphate donor, e.g., ATP, to the specific amino acid tyrosine on a protein, i.e., a posttranslational process called phosphorylation. Tyrosine kinases represent a large family, including receptor tyrosine kinases and non-receptor tyrosine kinases (nRTK) The former are cell surface receptors for growth factors, cytokines, and hormones, which transmit ligand-mediated extracellular signals to the cytoplasm and nucleus. Increasing evidence indicates that chronic exposure to stress seems to be effective in precipitating depression-like behavior in experimental animals Such long-term incubation of stress is thought to induce neuroadaptations of distinctive signaling pathways in neurons and/or glial cells of brain regions implicated in depression. These adaptive changes contribute to enduring depressive behavior, precise molecular mechanisms are far from clear. In different animal models of depression, acute or chronic stress altered autophosphorylation, expression, subcellular/subsynaptic distribution, and function of these nRTKs in the limbic forebrain regions critical for de-

SFK family
SFK-glutamate receptor interactions in depression
JAK family
FAK family
Conclusions
Findings
Conflict of interest
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