4.6 Article

Repeated ketamine treatment induces sex-specific behavioral and neurochemical effects in mice

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 312, Issue -, Pages 305-312

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2016.06.041

Keywords

Depression; Gender; Stress; Ketamine

Funding

  1. University of Dayton (UD) Graduate School
  2. UD Office for Graduate Affairs through the Graduate Student Summer Fellowship (GSSF) Program
  3. Barry Goldwater Scholarship in Excellence and Education Award
  4. UD Honors Program
  5. Lancaster-McDougall Award from the Department of Biology, University of Dayton
  6. University of Dayton
  7. Research Council Seed Grants (RCSG) from the University of Dayton Research Institute (UDRI)

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One of the most striking discoveries in the treatment of major depression was the finding that infusion of a single sub-anesthetic dose of ketamine induces rapid and sustained antidepressant effects in treatment resistant depressed patients. However, ketamine's antidepressant-like actions are transient and can only be sustained by repeated drug treatment. Despite the fact that women experience major depression at roughly twice the rate of men, research regarding the neurobiological antidepressant-relevant effects of ketamine has focused almost exclusively on the male sex. Importantly, knowledge regarding the sex differentiated effects, the frequency and the dose on which repeated ketamine administration stops being beneficial, is limited. In the current study, we investigated the behavioral, neurochemical and synaptic molecular effects of repeated ketamine treatment (10 mg/kg; 21 days) in male and female C57BL/6J mice. We report that ketamine induced beneficial antidepressant-like effects in male mice, but induced both anxiety-like (i.e., decreased time spent in the center of the open field arena) and depressive-like effects (i.e., enhanced immobility duration in the forced swim test; FST) in their female counterparts. Moreover, repeated ketamine treatment induced sustained sex-differentiated neurochemical and molecular effects, as it enhanced hippocampal synapsin protein levels and serotonin turnover in males, but attenuated glutamate and aspartate levels in female mice. Taken together, our findings indicate that repeated ketamine treatment induces opposite behavioral effects in male and female mice, and thus, present data have far-reaching implications for the sex-oriented use of ketamine in both experimental and clinical research settings. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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