The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders
<p>Inflammation appears to play a major role in the pathogenesis of Major Depression, and understanding the relationship between the immune system and mood disorders is a growing area of research. Patients undergoing cytokine therapy frequently develop depressive-like signs which cease upon te...
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Format: | Thesis |
Sprog: | English |
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2012
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author | Couch, Y |
author2 | Anthony, D |
author_facet | Anthony, D Couch, Y |
author_sort | Couch, Y |
collection | OXFORD |
description | <p>Inflammation appears to play a major role in the pathogenesis of Major Depression, and understanding the relationship between the immune system and mood disorders is a growing area of research. Patients undergoing cytokine therapy frequently develop depressive-like signs which cease upon termination of treatment. In addition, depressed patients often present with high levels of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. There are also significant behavioural correlates between inflammation-associated sickness behaviours and Major Depression, suggesting there is a bidirectional relationship between the immune system and central systems regulating behaviour. Both sickness behaviours in animals and cytokine-induced depression in humans can be reversed with antidepressants targeting the serotonergic (5-HT) system. Against this background, this thesis sought to investigate the role of inflammation in the development of certain specific characteristics of depressive-like states in animal models. Specifically, a single systemic endotoxin challenge (LPS) was used to model acute sickness behaviour and to study the behaviour and molecular effects of this challenge on the 5-HT system. These studies indicated that a single systemic challenge changed the function of the 5-HT system, as well as increasing expression levels of a number of 5-HT-related genes, and markers of inflammation in the CNS. A rodent chronic stress paradigm was employed to investigate whether these changes also occur in animals displaying depressive-like signs. Chronically stressed mice were shown to display significant features of rodent depression; decreased sucrose preference and increased forced swim immobility. These changes were also accompanied by increased expression of 5-HT-related genes and inflammatory markers within the CNS. Importantly, many of the molecular changes observed in LPS-induced sickness behaviour were conserved in the model of stress-induced Major Depression. In particular, increased TNF expression within the CNS was highlighted as a feature in both models. Novel anti-inflammatory agents were used to study the role of TNF in the development of sickness behaviours. Anti-TNF therapy, specifically the fusion protein etanercept, ameliorated sickness behaviour induced by LPS. Together, these data demonstrate that inflammation is capable of significantly changing the 5-HT system, and that stress per se is capable of inducing an inflammatory state within the CNS, which support the thesis that sickness and Major Depression are closely related at a molecular level.</p> |
first_indexed | 2024-03-07T00:45:55Z |
format | Thesis |
id | oxford-uuid:84a7340d-bb48-4a10-9c32-4a15e42aafc3 |
institution | University of Oxford |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T00:45:55Z |
publishDate | 2012 |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:84a7340d-bb48-4a10-9c32-4a15e42aafc32022-03-26T21:52:25ZThe effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disordersThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:84a7340d-bb48-4a10-9c32-4a15e42aafc3ImmunologyNeuropsychologyEmotion researchPharmacologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2012Couch, YAnthony, DSibson, NSharp, T<p>Inflammation appears to play a major role in the pathogenesis of Major Depression, and understanding the relationship between the immune system and mood disorders is a growing area of research. Patients undergoing cytokine therapy frequently develop depressive-like signs which cease upon termination of treatment. In addition, depressed patients often present with high levels of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. There are also significant behavioural correlates between inflammation-associated sickness behaviours and Major Depression, suggesting there is a bidirectional relationship between the immune system and central systems regulating behaviour. Both sickness behaviours in animals and cytokine-induced depression in humans can be reversed with antidepressants targeting the serotonergic (5-HT) system. Against this background, this thesis sought to investigate the role of inflammation in the development of certain specific characteristics of depressive-like states in animal models. Specifically, a single systemic endotoxin challenge (LPS) was used to model acute sickness behaviour and to study the behaviour and molecular effects of this challenge on the 5-HT system. These studies indicated that a single systemic challenge changed the function of the 5-HT system, as well as increasing expression levels of a number of 5-HT-related genes, and markers of inflammation in the CNS. A rodent chronic stress paradigm was employed to investigate whether these changes also occur in animals displaying depressive-like signs. Chronically stressed mice were shown to display significant features of rodent depression; decreased sucrose preference and increased forced swim immobility. These changes were also accompanied by increased expression of 5-HT-related genes and inflammatory markers within the CNS. Importantly, many of the molecular changes observed in LPS-induced sickness behaviour were conserved in the model of stress-induced Major Depression. In particular, increased TNF expression within the CNS was highlighted as a feature in both models. Novel anti-inflammatory agents were used to study the role of TNF in the development of sickness behaviours. Anti-TNF therapy, specifically the fusion protein etanercept, ameliorated sickness behaviour induced by LPS. Together, these data demonstrate that inflammation is capable of significantly changing the 5-HT system, and that stress per se is capable of inducing an inflammatory state within the CNS, which support the thesis that sickness and Major Depression are closely related at a molecular level.</p> |
spellingShingle | Immunology Neuropsychology Emotion research Pharmacology Couch, Y The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title | The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title_full | The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title_fullStr | The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title_full_unstemmed | The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title_short | The effect of inflammation on the central 5-HT system in mood disorders |
title_sort | effect of inflammation on the central 5 ht system in mood disorders |
topic | Immunology Neuropsychology Emotion research Pharmacology |
work_keys_str_mv | AT couchy theeffectofinflammationonthecentral5htsysteminmooddisorders AT couchy effectofinflammationonthecentral5htsysteminmooddisorders |