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Growing Up to Prozac
Drug makes new neurons mature faster
By Tina Hesman Saey
Peter Pan won't be pleased to hear the latest theory about how Prozac
works. A new study shows that the antidepressant stimulates growth of
neurons in the hippocampus and speeds the young brain cells toward maturity.
The maturation process could be the mechanism by which the drug relieves
depression.
Fluoxetine, the drug commonly known as Prozac, has been used to treat
depression since the 1980s. Prozac and other SSRIs (selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors) block the ability of the neurons to take up serotonin,
thereby raising levels of the active neurotransmitter in the brain. When
people with depression begin taking such drugs, serotonin levels in the
brain increase rapidly, but it often takes 2 to 4 weeks before they begin
to feel better.
The new study, published Feb. 6 in the Journal of Neuroscience, suggests
that the lag is due to the time it takes for serotonin to stimulate new
neurons to grow, mature, and integrate into brain circuits.
René Hen, a neuroscientist at Columbia University, and his colleagues
tested the long-term effects of Prozac treatment on a specially bred
strain of nervous mice.
Inside the brains of mice treated with Prozac, the researchers found
many more newborn neurons in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, a
part of the brain involved in learning and memory.
Not only did the Prozac-treated mice have more young neurons than untreated
mice, but their neurons had more branch-like extensions, called dendrites,
than did neurons from untreated mice. Those branches are important for
making connections with other neurons and wiring cells into the larger
network of the brain.
The researchers gave the mice a behavioral test to see whether having
more newly mature neurons was important for changing how the brain works.
For the test, the mice don't get any food for a day. Then researchers
place the mice in unfamiliar cages with food pellets in the middle of
the box. The mice usually cower in the corner, but after about 2 weeks
with Prozac treatment the rodents approach the food. Neither untreated
mice nor Prozac-treated mice whose hippocampi have been irradiated with
X rays to prevent new neuron formation seek out the food. The result
indicates that the birth and maturation of neurons in the hippocampus
is important for Prozac to do its job, Hen says.
But it may not be the only way the antidepressant works, he says.
"We still don't know, of all the effects Prozac has on young neurons,
which ones are important," Hen says.
It also isn't clear exactly how the hippocampus figures into depression,
says Randy Blakely, a neuroscientist from Vanderbilt University in Nashville,
Tenn. The brain region may be peripherally involved in regulating mood
through connected areas, such as the amygdala, which helps process emotions.
Antidepressants may trigger changes in the hippocampus that relieve
symptoms of depression but may not target the underlying cause of the
illness, Blakely says. Still, learning how antidepressants work gives
clues to how the brain is wired and what goes wrong in mental illness,
he says.
"We need these leads to understand the cellular and circuit changes
that occur with chronic drug administration to learn what the entire
system is doing," Blakely says.
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