Serotonin receptor changes after chronic antidepressant treatments: Ligand binding, electrophysiological, and behavioral studies

Early biochemical research on antidepressant treatments provided evidence that the treatments alter catecholaminergic and serotonergic activity. The mechanisms of action proposed by the resulting biogenic amine hypotheses of affective disorders, however, are not consistent with the delayed onset of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Life Sciences 1983-04, Vol.32 (16), p.1791-1801
1. Verfasser: Anderson, Janis L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Early biochemical research on antidepressant treatments provided evidence that the treatments alter catecholaminergic and serotonergic activity. The mechanisms of action proposed by the resulting biogenic amine hypotheses of affective disorders, however, are not consistent with the delayed onset of therapeutic effects of antidepressant treatments nor with the acute effects of more recently developed antidepressant drugs. Recent investigation of chronic antidepressant treatments using ligand binding, electrophysiological, and behavioral techniques have attempted to identify subgroups of receptors that might be affected uniquely and specifically by chronic antidepressant treatments. Such receptor changes have been suggested to form a basis for the mechanism of action of antidepressants. At the present time, however, the data produced by ligand binding experiments and electrophysiological experiments investigating serotonergic functioning do not fit together. In addition, interpretational problems and internal contradictions exist within each of the three bodies of data when straightforward hypotheses regarding a serotonergic role in antidepressant treatment are formulated. In order to clarify the serotonergic role in antidepressant drug and ECS effects the functional significance of observed changes in putative serotonergic receptors must be discovered. Unfortunately, putative receptors identified by ligand binding cannot be directly compared to those identified by electrophysiological techniques, because these two methods require the disassembly of the organism in mutually incompatible ways. In order to prove that either or both techniques do in fact identify functional serotonin receptors, investigators need to proceed both more microscopically and also more globally. Further anatomical and physiological studies are necessary to locate putative receptors and to demonstrate their place in existing serotonergic networks. Further behavioral studies must be done to relate alterations in receptor characteristics to the functioning of the intact organism.
ISSN:0024-3205
1879-0631
DOI:10.1016/0024-3205(83)90056-5