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NMDAR inhibition-independent antidepressant actions of ketamine metabolites

tryp2fun

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In this Nature paper (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v533/n7604/full/nature17998.html) they claim that the antidepressant effect of ketamine is due to a metabolite, (2S,6S;2R,6R)-hydroxynorketamine, which binds to AMPA receptors, not NMDA receptors, and has no "undesirable" psychoactive activity.

Abstract Major depressive disorder affects around 16 per cent of the world population at some point in their lives. Despite the availability of numerous monoaminergic-based antidepressants, most patients require several weeks, if not months, to respond to these treatments, and many patients never attain sustained remission of their symptoms. The non-competitive, glutamatergic NMDAR (N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor) antagonist (R,S)-ketamine exerts rapid and sustained antidepressant effects after a single dose in patients with depression, but its use is associated with undesirable side effects. Here we show that the metabolism of (R,S)-ketamine to (2S,6S;2R,6R)-hydroxynorketamine (HNK) is essential for its antidepressant effects, and that the (2R,6R)-HNK enantiomer exerts behavioural, electroencephalographic, electrophysiological and cellular antidepressant-related actions in mice. These antidepressant actions are independent of NMDAR inhibition but involve early and sustained activation of AMPARs (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid receptors). We also establish that (2R,6R)-HNK lacks ketamine-related side effects. Our data implicate a novel mechanism underlying the antidepressant properties of (R,S)-ketamine and have relevance for the development of next-generation, rapid-acting antidepressants.
 
In this Nature paper (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v533/n7604/full/nature17998.html) they claim that the antidepressant effect of ketamine is due to a metabolite, (2S,6S;2R,6R)-hydroxynorketamine, which binds to AMPA receptors, not NMDA receptors, and has no "undesirable" psychoactive activity.

But does it directly bind to AMPAr? From the paper, activation of AMPAr is required for the rapid-acting antidepressant action of NHK since AMPAr selective antagonists such as NBQX block the antidepressant effect. It seems from the paper that NHK "increase the activation of AMPArs via a currently unknown mechamism" possibly indirectly.
Testing NKH binding to AMPAr would be an obvious logical steps to test by the authors once AMPAr activation is known to be required for AD action. invitro testing of NHK in a AMPAr receptor assay!!

Somebody has placed NHK On wikipedia AMPAr page as agonist, but I couldn't find any evidence for that. If anybody came across one, please ping it.

Could the mechanism of NHK activation of AMPAr be indirectly via agonism at metabotropic glutamate receptors may be type 5 mGluR5? since agonists of mGluR5 have similar antidepressant profile as ketamine or rather its metabolite NHK. Interesting paper..
 
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