Abstract
Demonstration of neurogenesis in adult brain represents a major advance in our understanding of the cellular mechanisms underlying neuronal remodeling and complex behavior. Recent studies from our laboratory and others demonstrate that chronic administration of an antidepressant, including either a 5-HT or norepinephrine selective reuptake inhibitor, up-regulates neurogenesis in adult rodent hippocampus. Up-regulation of neurogenesis could block or reverse the effects of stress on hippocampal neurons, which include down-regulation of neurogenesis, as well as atrophy. The possibility that the cAMP signal transduction cascade contributes to the regulation of neurogenesis by antidepressants is supported by previous studies and by recent work. Although additional studies must be conducted to determine the significance of adult neurogenesis in humans, these findings will stimulate new avenues of research to identify the cellular and molecular basis of stress-related mood disorders as well as the development of novel therapeutic strategies.
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Our understanding of how the brain functions and undergoes adaptation and plasticity has changed dramatically over the past several years. A great deal of work has demonstrated that altered levels of neurotransmitters, second messenger pathways, and gene expression profiles underlie cellular and behavioral plasticity. This includes models of learning and memory as well as models of depression, anxiety, and psychosis, and the long-term actions of psychotropic drugs. However, it is now becoming increasing evident that changes in cellular morphology and even more pronounced alterations in brain structure also contribute to neural plasticity or remodeling. At the cellular level these changes can occur in the form of up or down-regulation of synapse formation and spine density or extension and retraction of dendrites. Another very dramatic example is up or down-regulation of neurogenesis in adult brain. Studies in recent years demonstrate that new cell birth occurs in adult brain and that the rate of neurogenesis and the survival of new neurons is regulated by a number of environmental, endocrine, and pharmacological treatments.
In this paper we discuss the evidence that structural remodeling may be involved in the pathophysiology and treatment of mood disorders. The potential role of neurogenesis is also discussed as well as the molecular mechanisms which underlie antidepressant regulation of new cell birth and survival. The studies to date suggest an exciting possibility for the role of neurogenesis in depression, although this hypothesis must be viewed with caution until additional evidence is provided, particularly in humans.
STRUCTURAL ALTERATIONS IN MOOD DISORDERS
The possibility that cellular remodeling may contribute to the pathophysiology of mood disorders has gained support from clinical brain imaging studies. Much of this work has focused on the hippocampus, a limbic brain structure that plays a role in learning and memory as well as control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. There are now several independent studies reporting that the volume of hippocampus is decreased in patients suffering from depression or post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (Bremner et al. 1995, 2000; Sheline et al. 1996, 1999; Steffens et al. 2000). Sheline and colleagues have reported that the reduction in hippocampal volume correlates with the length of illness, suggesting that the stress associated with depression may cause the structural change and not the reverse (Sheline et al. 1999). However, it is possible that small structural changes may occur that contribute to the onset of depression and that the magnitude of the hippocampal reduction then continues to progress over the course of illness. It will be important to determine if the reduction in hippocampal volume is reversible with successful antidepressant treatment, and studies are currently underway at several sites to answer this question.
REGULATION ADULT NEUROGENESIS
The emphasis on studies of hippocampus stems in part from the work of McEwen and colleagues demonstrating that stress can have profound effects on the morphology of hippocampal neurons (see McEwen 1999; Gould et al. 1998). This includes a decrease in the dendritic arborization of CA3 pyramidal neurons and down-regulation of neurogenesis of granule cells in adult dentate gyrus. The focus of this paper will be on studies of neurogenesis. However, it is important to point out the potential significance of the CA3 neuronal atrophy because it is not yet clear if one or both of these stress effects is more likely to explain the reduction in hippocampal volume observed in depression and PTSD.
Neurogenesis in Adult Brain
Neurogenesis has been documented in adult brain of a number of different animals, including bird, rodent, monkey and human (see Gould et al. 1999; Gage 2000; Gross 2000). In adult mammalian brain, significant rates of adult neurogenesis are restricted to two brain regions, the olfactory bulb and the hippocampus. In the hippocampus, progenitor cells are located in the subgranular zone where they divide and give rise to new neurons. A recent detailed analysis of neurogenesis reports that there are approximately 9,000 new cells per day or 250,000 cells per month in adult rodent hippocampus (Cameron and McKay 2001). Approximately 50% of these cells differentiate and express cellular markers characteristic of neurons, which represents about 6% of the total number of granule cells. It is also estimated that this number of new granule neurons represents about 60% of the afferents from the entorhinal cortex and 30% of CA3 pyramidal cells receiving efferent projections from granule cells (Cameron and McKay 2001). These findings indicate that the number of new neurons, presumably with distinct characteristics, would be sufficient to contribute in a significant manner to the function of hippocampus. Exact determinations of the number of new neurons in primate brain have not been conducted, but estimates are that there may be 10 to 20% of the number of newborn cells observed in rodent brain. This amount of new neurons would be sufficient to influence the function of hippocampus in primates.
The possibility that neurogenesis plays a role in neural plasticity and remodeling is supported by reports that neurogenesis in adult brain can be regulated by a number of treatments. Stimuli that increase neurogenesis include exercise, enriched environment, hippocampal-dependent learning, and estrogen (Figure 1 ) (see Tanapat et al. 1999; van Praag et al. 2000; Gould et al. 1999; Gage 2000). Alterations in neurogenesis can occur via regulation of the rate of cell proliferation or regulation of the number of newborn neurons that survive. Approximately 50% of the new neurons in adult rodent hippocampus survive while the remaining cells degenerate within four weeks after birth. More definitive evidence for a functional role of adult neurogenesis has been reported in a recent study. In this paper Shors and Gould demonstrate that inhibition of neurogenesis by administration of a chemical cell cycle inhibitor blocks hippocampal-dependent learning (Shors et al. 2001). Although there is concern about the specificity of chemical inhibitors like the one used in this study, the results provide the first direct evidence that new neurons contribute to the function of adult hippocampus.
Stress Decreases Adult Neurogenesis
In contrast to the positive effects of exercise and enriched environment, stress significantly down-regulates neurogenesis in adult hippocampus. Gould and McEwen have reported that exposure of marmoset monkeys or tree shrews to intruder stress for only a short period of time (1 h) down-regulates the rate of neurogenesis in adult hippocampus see Gould et al. (1998). Administration of adrenal-glucocorticoids also decreases neurogenesis in adult hippocampus (Gould et al. 1992; see McEwen1999), indicating that activation of the HPA axis and release of glucocorticoids underlies the down-regulation of neurogenesis in response to stress. We have also found that short-term (30 min) exposure to intermittent footshock decreases neurogenesis by approximately 50% (Malberg et al. 2000a). More importantly, we have found that exposure to inescapable footshock results in a long-lasting (at least nine days) down-regulation of neurogenesis that is not seen with escapable footshock (Malberg et al. 2000a). The long-lasting down-regulation of neurogenesis resulting from exposure to inescapable footshock also correlates with learned helplessness behavior in this model of depression.
Down-regulation of neurogenesis by exposure to stress, including learned helplessness, raises the possibility that decreased granule cell number could contribute to the reduction in hippocampal volume observed in depressed patients. Decreased neurogenesis could also contribute to selected symptoms of mood disorders, including cognitive abnormalities and loss of inhibitory control of the HPA axis. Additional studies in rodents and postmortem studies in humans will be required to determine if, and to what extent decreased neurogenesis could contribute to the structural changes observed in depression, as well as PTSD. Moreover, the functional relevance of neurogenesis to complex behavioral phenotypes that are observed in models of depression must be determined.
ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT INCREASES ADULT NEUROGENESIS
In recent years considerable progress has been made in characterizing postreceptor adaptations that occur in response to antidepressant treatment. This has led to the discovery that repeated long-term antidepressant administration up-regulates the cAMP–CREB (cAMP response element binding protein) cascade and expression of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in hippocampus (Figure 2 ) (Nibuya et al. 1995, 1996; Thome et al. 2000). Both CREB and BDNF are known to play a role in synaptic plasticity as well as neuronal survival (see Finkbeiner 2000; Duman et al. 2000).
Based on these findings, studies were initiated to determine if antidepressants influence neuronal remodeling, particularly neurogenesis. The results of this work reveal the exciting discovery that antidepressant treatment increases adult neurogenesis in hippocampus (Figure 3 ) (Malberg et al. 2000b; Madsen et al. 2000; Manev et al. 2000; see Duman et al. 2000; Jacobs et al. 2000). Up-regulation of neurogenesis is observed with different classes of antidepressants, including 5-HT and NE selective reuptake inhibitors, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, and electroconvulsive seizure. The mood stabilizing agent lithium is also reported to increase neurogenesis in adult hippocampus (Chen et al. 2000). Up-regulation of neurogenesis is dependent on long-term antidepressant administration (two to four weeks), consistent with the time course for the therapeutic action of antidepressant treatment. Other non-antidepressant psychotropic drugs tested, including haloperidol and morphine, do not up-regulate adult neurogenesis. In fact, morphine treatment is reported to decrease neurogenesis in adult hippocampus (Eisch et al. 2000). These results suggest that increased neurogenesis is pharmacologically specific for antidepressants. Further characterization of mature cells resulting from antidepressant administration demonstrates that the cells remain viable four weeks after antidepressant treatment and that approximately 75% of these cells express markers of neurons (Malberg et al. 2000b).
We have also initiated studies to determine if antidepressant treatment blocks or reverses the down-regulation of neurogenesis resulting from stress. As described above, we have found that exposure to inescapable footshock in the learned helplessness model of depression results in a long lasting down-regulation of neurogenesis that is not observed with escapable footshock. When animals exposed to inescapable shock are treated with an antidepressant, fluoxetine in this experiment, the behavioral helplessness is reversed. Moreover, we found that fluoxetine treatment also reversed the decrease in neurogenesis (Malberg et al. 2000a).
The results of these studies indicate that up-regulation of neurogenesis would opposes the actions of stress and raise the possibility that increased neurogenesis could contribute to the actions of antidepressant treatment. Additional studies will be needed to directly test this hypothesis. As described above approaches to block adult neurogenesis using either chemical inhibitors or transgenic approaches must be conducted to test the role of neurogenesis in behavioral models of depression and in the action of antidepressant treatment . Analysis of granule cell number in postmortem hippocampus from depressed patients with or without medication at the time of death must also be conducted. These types of studies will contribute to a more complete understanding of the cellular actions of antidepressants and how they relate to depression.
FACTORS INVOLVED IN THE REGULATION OF ADULT NEUROGENESIS
One of the goals of our work is to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the actions of antidepressant treatment and we have extended this to regulation of neurogenesis. A brief review of reports on factors involved in the regulation of neurogenesis is provided and then a more detailed description of the work from our laboratory on the role of the cAMP–CREB cascade.
Regulation of Adult Neurogenesis by Neurotrophic Factors
Previous studies have reported that neurogenesis is regulated by a number of growth factors, including epidermal growth factor, insulin-like growth factor-1, and fibroblast growth factor-2 (Figure 4 ) (see Cameron et al. 1998). There are also reports that neurotrophic factors, including BDNF, influence neurogenesis. Incubation of cultured progenitor cells with BDNF is reported to increase the differentiation of cells into neurons (Palmer et al. 1997). There is also an in vivo study where BDNF administered intraventricularly was found to increase neurogenesis in the subventricular zone, the region that gives rise to new neurons in the olfactory bulb (Zigova et al. 1998). Unfortunately, the hippocampus was not examined in this study. In preliminary work, we have examined BDNF heterozygous knockout mice to address this question. Homozygous BDNF null mutant mice die shortly after birth so the influence of complete deletion of BDNF could not be determined. In BDNF heterozygous mice there was no difference in the number of newborn cells compared with that in the hippocampus of wild-type littermates. This suggests that half the normal complement of BDNF may be sufficient to support adult neurogenesis. Alternatively, the results may indicate that BDNF is not a critical factor for regulation of neurogenesis in hippocampus. It will also be interesting to determine if BDNF null mutant mice are more vulnerable to stress, since stress is reported to decrease levels of BDNF, as well as neurogenesis. Heterozygous mice should be useful for these studies because stress decreases levels of BDNF by about 50% (Smith et al. 1995).
Regulation of Neurogenesis by Serotonin
There is not much information on neurotransmitter regulation of neurogenesis, although there are studies demonstrating that the 5-HT system can influence the rate of new cell birth in adult hippocampus. Lesion of the 5-HT system is reported to decrease neurogenesis (Brezun and Daszula 2000) and preliminary studies demonstrate that administration of fenfluramine, which causes release of 5-HT, increases adult neurogenesis in hippocampus (Jacobs et al. 1998). In contrast, administration of a 5-HT1A antagonist, WAY 100,635, blocks fenfluramine-induction of neurogenesis, as well as the basal rate of neurogenesis in the absence of fenfluramine (Jacobs et al. 1998). These studies suggest that regulation of the 5-HT system and 5-HT1A receptors could contribute to the induction of adult neurogenesis by antidepressants, at least the effect of a 5-HT selective reuptake inhibitor. It will be important to directly test the role of 5-HT1A, as well as other 5-HT and NE receptor subtypes, in the actions of antidepressant treatments.
Role of the cAMP–CREB Cascade in Adult Neurogenesis
There is very little information on the intracellular signal transduction pathways that regulate adult neurogenesis. There is one report that activation of the cAMP pathway in cultured progenitor cells increases neuronal differentiation (Palmer et al. 1997). The potential role of the cAMP–CREB cascade in neurogenesis is of particular interest because of our previous studies demonstrating that antidepressant treatment up-regulates this pathway (Figure 2) (see Duman et al. 1997; 2000). One piece of evidence of particular interest was discovered when we were studying the influence of antidepressants on CREB phosphorylation. We reported that antidepressant treatment increases the phosphorylation of CREB, measured with a phospho-specific antibody (Figure 5 ) (Thome et al. 2000). The additional point of interest in these studies was that under basal conditions there was prominent expression of phospho-CREB in cells within, or adjacent to, the subgranular zone where the progenitor cells are located (Figure 4). The finding that phospho-CREB immunoreactivity under basal conditions in the subgranular zone together with our previous work on antidepressant regulation of CREB prompted additional studies to characterize the role of the cAMP–CREB cascade in adult neurogenesis.
In one series of studies a chemical inhibitor of cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase type IV (PDE4), the enzyme responsible for breakdown of cAMP, was used to activate the cAMP pathway. Previous studies demonstrate that a selective PDE4 inhibitor, rolipram, increases the expression of BDNF in hippocampus and this drug was used for the neurogenesis experiments (Nibuya et al. 1996). In preliminary studies we have found that chronic administration of rolipram increases adult neurogenesis in hippocampus (Kim et al. 2000). Up-regulation of neurogenesis by rolipram was dependent on repeated administration (two weeks), similar to the effect of antidepressants. We also found that rolipram increased levels of phospho-CREB in hippocampus, similar to the effect of antidepressant treatment. These findings suggest that activation of the cAMP–CREB cascade regulates specific gene targets that influence neurogenesis.
To more directly test this possibility we have used the tetracycline-inducible transgenic approach to overexpress a dominant negative mutant of CREB in hippocampus (see Chen et al. 1998). The dominant negative CREB contains a mutation of the Ser133 site, which is required for phosphorylation-induced transactivation of CREB. Overexpression of mutant CREB in hippocampus significantly decreased neurogenesis in adult hippocampus (Nakagawa et al. 2000). Combined with the rolipram studies, this work demonstrates that activation of the cAMP–CREB cascade up-regulates neurogenesis in hippocampus. The specific CREB-induced gene that leads to induction of neurogenesis is currently being investigated. Studies are also being conducted to determine if the influence of the cAMP–CREB cascade occurs directly on the neural progenitor cells or if the effect is indirect and occurs via expression and release of a factor from surrounding cells. In preliminary studies, we have not been able to detect phospho-CREB in newborn cells that have recently divided. This suggests that either induction of phospho-CREB is transient or that activation of the cAMP–CREB cascade occurs in the surrounding cells.
Colocalization of Phospho-CREB with Markers of Maturing Neurons
There are multiple stages at which the process of neurogenesis can be regulated. In addition to proliferation, the maturation, differentiation and survival of newborn cells can be influenced. We have begun to examine the influence of the cAMP–CREB cascade, as well as antidepressant treatment, on these other stages of neurogenesis. One of the ways that maturation of neurons can be studied is to use markers of neurons that are immature or that are undergoing remodeling. One such marker is polysialic acid-neural cell adhesion molecule (PSA-NCAM). Expression of PSA-NCAM on the cell surface attenuates cell adhesion because of its large hydration volume and negative charge, making it an attractive molecule to mediate changes in cellular remodeling during development and in adult brain (Kiss and Rougon 1997). Although PSA-NCAM disappears from most of the CNS after early postnatal development it continues to be expressed in regions of the brain capable of cellular remodeling and neurogenesis, including the granule cell layer of the hippocampus. PSA-NCAM is reported to play a role in long-term potentiation and other forms of activity dependent cellular remodeling (see Muller et al. 1996; Becker et al. 1996).
In preliminary studies we have examined the interaction of PSA-NCAM and phospho-CREB during the maturation of newborn cells in hippocampus. As reported previously, PSA-NCAM is not expressed in these newborn cells until they begin to extend processes at approximately one week after birth, and then it is continuously expressed up week 3. Interestingly, we find that the time course for expression of phospho-CREB is exactly the same as that for PSA-NCAM. Triple-immunohistochemical analysis demonstrates colocalization of PSA-NCAM, phospho-CREB, and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) between one and three weeks after cells are born, but not at shorter (1 d) or longer (4 weeks) time points. This suggests that phospho-CREB, like PSA-NCAM, is involved in the maturation and/or differentiation of neurons. We also have preliminary evidence that CREB may influence the expression of PSA-NCAM. The promoter activity of one of the enzymes responsible for the synthesis of PSA-NCAM, a polysialyltransferase, is increased by activation of the cAMP–CREB cascade.
The expression of phospho-CREB, as well as PSA-NCAM during the 1 to 3-week time frame of neurogenesis, is particularly interesting in light of the recent study from Shors and Gould on neurogenesis and hippocampal-dependent learning (Shors et al. 2001). They found that there was a critical period of neuronal maturation of approximately two weeks that was required for neurogenesis-dependent learning. If neurogenesis was inhibited for a shorter period of time learning was not blocked. They concluded that new neurons must be at a specific stage of maturation to be capable of supporting hippocampal-dependent learning. Previous studies have demonstrated a role for CREB in other forms of cellular and behavioral learning and memory (see Silva et al. 1998). Localization of phospho-CREB during the critical period of granule cell maturation suggests that this transcription factor may play a role in deciding the functional fate of these new neurons (Figure 6 ). It is possible that new granule cells are also involved in other hippocampal-dependent functions, including regulation of the HPA axis as well as depression related symptoms, and that phospho-CREB contributes to these cellular decisions. Further insight into the functional role of CREB may also be provided by identification of the neurotransmitters and/or neurotrophic factors that control the phosphorylation of CREB during this critical phase of functional maturation.
FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
Reports from basic and clinical studies demonstrate that in addition to neurochemical alterations, synaptic remodeling and structural alterations contribute to the pathophysiology and treatment of stress-related mood disorders. Although additional studies must be conducted in humans, the discovery of neurogenesis in adult brain and of the environmental and pharmacological factors that regulate neurogenesis represent major advances in the fields of neurobiology and psychiatry. Further progress and breakthroughs in basic neurobiology will continue to provide new avenues of research to characterize the cellular basis of complex behavioral illnesses like depression. The findings discussed in this paper will help shape future studies to identify the cellular alterations that contribute to psychiatric illness, including analysis of more discrete forms of neuronal remodeling (e.g., synapse formation and spine density). Moreover, continued research on the molecular mechanisms that control neurogenesis and neuronal remodeling will result in new strategies for the development of novel therapeutic interventions.
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Duman, R., Nakagawa, S. & Malberg, J. Regulation of Adult Neurogenesis by Antidepressant Treatment. Neuropsychopharmacol 25, 836–844 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0893-133X(01)00358-X
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0893-133X(01)00358-X
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