AMBMP activates WNT pathway and alleviates stress-induced behaviors in maternal separation and chronic stress models

Depressive disorders are both prevalent and debilitating, and a proportion of patients have treatment resistance to classic antidepressants. Recent evidence has implicated the intracellular WNT signaling pathway as having a key role in the pathogenesis of major depressive disorder. In the present st...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of pharmacology 2020-08, Vol.881, p.173192-173192, Article 173192
Hauptverfasser: Xia, Zhang, Qi, Wang, Xiaofeng, Guan, Jiguang, Kang, Hongfei, Huang, Yuchen, Zhang, Yihan, Zhang, Yan, Wang, Nannan, Li, Yiwei, lin, Hongsheng, Bi, Xiaobai, Li
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Depressive disorders are both prevalent and debilitating, and a proportion of patients have treatment resistance to classic antidepressants. Recent evidence has implicated the intracellular WNT signaling pathway as having a key role in the pathogenesis of major depressive disorder. In the present study, we investigated the role of β-catenin and transcription factor-4 (TCF4) in the depression-like and anxiety-like behaviors exhibited by mice exposed to maternal separation, or chronic mild stress. Both rodent models of childhood and adulthood stress showed depression and anxiety-like behaviors. During the last three weeks of medication, we applied AMBMP (2-Amino-4-[3,4- (methylenedioxy)benzylamino]-6-(3-methoxyphenyl)pyrimidine) to the maternal separation and chronic stress model for the first time. The drug alleviated the depression-like index in saccharin preference test (SPT) and forced swim test (FST), and anxiety-like index in open field test (OFT) and elevated-plus maze (EPM), and reversed the disruption of β-catenin and TCF4 in stressed mice by upregulating the WNT pathway specifically. Therefore, the WNT pathway may be involved in the mediation of patient recovery and could be a target for novel antidepressants.
ISSN:0014-2999
1879-0712
DOI:10.1016/j.ejphar.2020.173192