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… Click to show full abstract
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.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.