Behavioural, neurochemical and neuroendocrine effects of the endogenous β-carboline harmane in fear-conditioned rats.

J Psychopharmacol

Pharmacology and Therapeutics, School of Medicine and NCBES Neuroscience Cluster, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.

Published: February 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Harmane enhances neuronal activation related to stress and influences behavior in anxiety and antidepressant animal models, but its mechanisms are not fully understood.
  • In experiments, harmane was administered to rats and did not significantly change fear responses or activity levels but suggested potential sedative effects by altering rearing and freezing behaviors.
  • The compound increased stress-related hormone levels and serotonin/noradrenaline content in specific brain regions, while simultaneously reducing some neurotransmitter turnovers, indicating complex impacts on brain chemistry depending on fear conditioning.

Article Abstract

The putative endogenous imidazoline binding site ligand harmane enhances neuronal activation in response to psychological stress and alters behaviour in animal models of anxiety and antidepressant efficacy. However, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying harmane's psychotropic effects are poorly understood. We investigated the effects of intraperitoneal injection of harmane (2.5 and 10 mg/kg) on fear-conditioned behaviour, hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, and monoaminergic activity within specific fear-associated areas of the rat brain. Harmane had no significant effect on the duration of contextually induced freezing or 22 kHz ultrasonic vocalisations and did not alter the contextually induced suppression of motor activity, including rearing. Harmane reduced the duration of rearing and tended to increase freezing in non-fear-conditioned controls, suggesting potential sedative effects. Harmane increased plasma ACTH and corticosterone concentrations, and serotonin (in hypothalamus, amygdaloid cortex, prefrontal cortex and hippocampus) and noradrenaline (prefrontal cortex) content, irrespective of fear-conditioning. Furthermore, harmane reduced dopamine and serotonin turnover in the PFC and hypothalamus, and serotonin turnover in the amygdaloid cortex in both fear-conditioned and non-fear-conditioned rats. In contrast, harmane increased dopamine and noradrenaline content and reduced dopamine turnover in the amygdala of fear-conditioned rats only, suggesting differential effects on catecholaminergic transmission in the presence and absence of fear. The precise mechanism(s) mediating these effects of harmane remain to be determined but may involve its inhibitory action on monoamine oxidases. These findings support a role for harmane as a neuromodulator, altering behaviour, brain neurochemistry and neuroendocrine function.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269881112460108DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

harmane
10
fear-conditioned rats
8
contextually induced
8
harmane reduced
8
effects harmane
8
harmane increased
8
amygdaloid cortex
8
prefrontal cortex
8
reduced dopamine
8
serotonin turnover
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!