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Abstracts - July 1997 - Archives of General Psychiatry
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A Molecular and Cellular Theory of Depression
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Ronald S. Duman PHD; George R. Heninger MD; Eric J. Nestler MD PHD

Recent studies have begun to characterize the actions of stress and
antidepressant treatments beyond the neurotransmitter and receptor level.

This work has demonstrated that long-term antidepressant treatments result
in the sustained activation of the cyclic adenosine 3', 5'-monophosphate
system in specific brain regions, including the increased function and
expression of the transcription factor cyclic adenosine monophosphate
response element-binding protein.

The activated cyclic adenosine 3', 5'-monophosphate system leads to the
regulation of specific target genes, including the increased expression of
brain-derived neurotrophic factor in certain populations of neurons in the
hippocampus and cerebral cortex.

The importance of these changes is highlighted by the discovery that stress
can decrease the expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and lead
to atrophy of these same populations of stress-vulnerable hippocampal neurons.

The possibility that the decreased size and impaired function of these
neurons may be involved in depression is supported by recent clinical
imaging studies, which demonstrate a decreased volume of certain brain
structures.

These findings constitute the framework for an updated molecular and
cellular hypothesis of depression, which posits that stress-induced
vulnerability and the therapeutic action of antidepressant treatments occur
via intracellular mechanisms that decrease or increase, respectively,
neurotrophic factors necessary for the survival and function of particular
neurons.

This hypothesis also explains how stress and other types of neuronal insult
can lead to depression in vulnerable individuals and it outlines novel
targets for the rational design of fundamentally new therapeutic agents.

Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1997;54:597-606
Contents  copyright 1997 American Medical Association. All rights reserved
<http://www.ama-assn.org/sci-pubs/journals/most/recent/issues/psyc/nv6072a.h
tm>
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