AI Article Synopsis

  • Exposure to organophosphates during the First Gulf War is linked to Gulf War Illness, which presents treatment challenges, particularly for depression.
  • Ketamine has shown rapid and lasting antidepressant effects in other contexts, and this study explores its potential benefits for depression induced by a chemical similar to Gulf War exposures in rats.
  • Results indicate that ketamine treatment in DFP-exposed rats improves depression symptoms, suggesting that both immediate effects are related to calcium signaling and longer-lasting effects might involve increased Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF).

Article Abstract

Exposure to organophosphates (OP) during the First Gulf War is among one of the factors for Gulf War Illness (GWI) development in veterans and it has been challenging to treat GWI symptoms with existing therapies. Ketamine produces a rapid-onset and sustained antidepressant response, but there is no evidence whether ketamine treatment is effective for GWI depression. Repeated, low-dose exposure to diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) mimic Gulf War related OP exposures and produces a chronic depressive state in rats. In this study, DFP-exposed rats treated with ketamine (10 mg/kg, i.p.) exhibited antidepressant-like effect on the Forced Swim Test at 1-h. This effect persisted at 24-h post ketamine, a time-point by which it is eliminated from the brain suggesting involvement of mechanisms that affect long-term synaptic plasticity. Western blot analysis showed significantly lower Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) levels in DFP rat brains. Ketamine produced a nonsignificant increase in BDNF expression at 1-h but produced a larger, significant (2.2-fold) increase at 24-h in DFP rats. We previously reported chronic hippocampal calcium elevations ([Ca]) in DFP rats. Ketamine-treated DFP rats exhibited significantly lower [Ca] at 1-h but not at 24-h. Interestingly, treatment with ANA-12, a TrkB-BDNF receptor antagonist, in DFP rats blunted ketamine's antidepressant-like effect at 24-h but not at 1-h. These experiments suggest that in a rat model of DFP-induced depression, inhibition of the NMDAR-Ca contributes to the rapid-onset antidepressant effects of ketamine while the antidepressant actions that persisted at 24-h post ketamine administration involve upregulation of BDNF signaling.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuro.2020.06.011DOI Listing

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