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Publication : Ventral CA3 Activation Mediates Prophylactic Ketamine Efficacy Against Stress-Induced Depressive-like Behavior.

First Author  Mastrodonato A Year  2018
Journal  Biol Psychiatry Volume  84
Issue  11 Pages  846-856
PubMed ID  29615190 Mgi Jnum  J:284565
Mgi Id  MGI:6386010 Doi  10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.02.011
Citation  Mastrodonato A, et al. (2018) Ventral CA3 Activation Mediates Prophylactic Ketamine Efficacy Against Stress-Induced Depressive-like Behavior. Biol Psychiatry 84(11):846-856
abstractText  BACKGROUND: We previously reported that a single injection of ketamine prior to stress protects against the onset of depressive-like behavior and attenuates learned fear. However, the molecular pathways and brain circuits underlying ketamine-induced stress resilience are still largely unknown. METHODS: Here, we tested whether prophylactic ketamine administration altered neural activity in the prefrontal cortex and/or hippocampus. Mice were injected with saline or ketamine (30 mg/kg) 1 week before social defeat. Following behavioral tests assessing depressive-like behavior, mice were sacrificed and brains were processed to quantify DeltaFosB expression. In a second set of experiments, mice were stereotaxically injected with viral vectors into ventral CA3 (vCA3) in order to silence or overexpress DeltaFosB prior to prophylactic ketamine administration. In a third set of experiments, ArcCreER(T2) mice, a line that allows for the indelible labeling of neural ensembles activated by a single experience, were used to quantify memory traces representing a contextual fear conditioning experience following prophylactic ketamine administration. RESULTS: Prophylactic ketamine administration increased DeltaFosB expression in the ventral dentate gyrus and vCA3 of social defeat mice but not of control mice. Transcriptional silencing of DeltaFosB activity in vCA3 inhibited prophylactic ketamine efficacy, while overexpression of DeltaFosB mimicked and occluded ketamine's prophylactic effects. In ArcCreER(T2) mice, ketamine administration altered memory traces representing the contextual fear conditioning experience in vCA3 but not in the ventral dentate gyrus. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that prophylactic ketamine may be protective against a stressor by altering neural activity, specifically the neural ensembles representing an individual stressor in vCA3.
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