Antidepressant-Like Effects of κ-Opioid Receptor Antagonists in Wistar Kyoto Rats
- 18 November 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Neuropsychopharmacology
- Vol. 35 (3) , 752-763
- https://doi.org/10.1038/npp.2009.183
Abstract
The Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rat strain is a putative genetic model of comorbid depression and anxiety. Previous research showing increased κ-opioid receptor (KOR) gene expression in the brains of WKY rats, combined with studies implicating the KOR in animal models of depression and anxiety, suggests that alterations in the KOR system could have a role in the WKY behavioral phenotype. Here, the effects of KOR antagonists in the forced swim test (FST) were compared with the WKY and the Sprague–Dawley (SD) rat strains. As previously reported, WKY rats showed more immobility behavior than SD rats. The KOR antagonists selectively produced antidepressant-like effects in the WKY rats. By contrast, the antidepressant desipramine reduced immobility in both strains. Brain regions potentially underlying the strain-specific effects of KOR antagonists in the FST were identified using c-fos expression as a marker of neuronal activity. The KOR antagonist nor-binaltorphimine produced differential effects on the number of c-fos-positive profiles in the piriform cortex and nucleus accumbens shell between SD and WKY rats. The piriform cortex and nucleus accumbens also contained higher levels of KOR protein and dynorphin A peptide, respectively, in the WKY strain. In addition, local administration of nor-binaltorphimine directly into the piriform cortex produced antidepressant-like effects in WKY rats further implicating this region in the antidepressant-like response to KOR antagonists. These results support the use of the WKY rat as a model of affective disorders potentially involving KOR overactivity and provide more evidence that KOR antagonists could potentially be used as novel antidepressants.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nonresponse, partial response, and failure to achieve remission: humanistic and cost burden in major depressive disorderDepression and Anxiety, 2009
- Biological substrates of reward and aversion: A nucleus accumbens activity hypothesisNeuropharmacology, 2009
- κ-Opioid System Regulates the Long-Lasting Behavioral Adaptations Induced by Early-Life Exposure to MethylphenidateNeuropsychopharmacology, 2008
- Presynaptic Inhibition of Diverse Afferents to the Locus Ceruleus by -Opiate Receptors: A Novel Mechanism for Regulating the Central Norepinephrine SystemJournal of Neuroscience, 2008
- The Dysphoric Component of Stress Is Encoded by Activation of the Dynorphin κ-Opioid SystemJournal of Neuroscience, 2008
- Central κ-opioid receptor-mediated antidepressant-like effects of nor-Binaltorphimine: Behavioral and BDNF mRNA expression studiesEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 2007
- Identifying Genes in Monoamine Nuclei that may Determine Stress Vulnerability and Depressive Behavior in Wistar–Kyoto RatsNeuropsychopharmacology, 2006
- Evidence that serotonin reuptake modulators increase the density of serotonin innervation in the forebrainJournal of Neurochemistry, 2005
- Lineage is an Epigenetic Modifier of QTL Influencing Behavioral Coping with StressBehavior Genetics, 2005
- Identification of novel electroconvulsive shock-induced and activity-dependent genes in the rat brainBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2005