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Publication : Prefrontal cortex molecular clock modulates development of depression-like phenotype and rapid antidepressant response in mice.

First Author  Sarrazin DH Year  2024
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  15
Issue  1 Pages  7257
PubMed ID  39179578 Mgi Jnum  J:353841
Mgi Id  MGI:7713838 Doi  10.1038/s41467-024-51716-9
Citation  Sarrazin DH, et al. (2024) Prefrontal cortex molecular clock modulates development of depression-like phenotype and rapid antidepressant response in mice. Nat Commun 15(1):7257
abstractText  Depression is associated with dysregulated circadian rhythms, but the role of intrinsic clocks in mood-controlling brain regions remains poorly understood. We found increased circadian negative loop and decreased positive clock regulators expression in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of a mouse model of depression, and a subsequent clock countermodulation by the rapid antidepressant ketamine. Selective Bmal1KO in CaMK2a excitatory neurons revealed that the functional mPFC clock is an essential factor for the development of a depression-like phenotype and ketamine effects. Per2 silencing in mPFC produced antidepressant-like effects, while REV-ERB agonism enhanced the depression-like phenotype and suppressed ketamine action. Pharmacological potentiation of clock positive modulator ROR elicited antidepressant-like effects, upregulating plasticity protein Homer1a, synaptic AMPA receptors expression and plasticity-related slow wave activity specifically in the mPFC. Our data demonstrate a critical role for mPFC molecular clock in regulating depression-like behavior and the therapeutic potential of clock pharmacological manipulations influencing glutamatergic-dependent plasticity.
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