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Behavioral changes induced through adenosine A2A receptor ligands in a rat depression model induced by olfactory bulbectomy
Author(s) -
Padilla Karla Margarita,
QuintanarSetephano Andres,
LópezVallejo Fabian,
Berumen Laura Cristina,
Miledi Ricardo,
GarcíaAlcocer Guadalupe
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2162-3279
DOI - 10.1002/brb3.952
Subject(s) - anhedonia , behavioural despair test , open field , depression (economics) , psychology , adenosine , medicine , adenosine receptor , animal models of depression , antidepressant , adenosine a1 receptor , pharmacology , endocrinology , receptor , agonist , hippocampus , dopamine , macroeconomics , economics
Background Major depressive disorders are characterized by their severity and long‐lasting symptoms, which make such disorders highly disabling illnesses. Unfortunately, 50% of major depressive patients experience relapses, perhaps partly because drug research has been performed only in animal models that screen for antidepressant drugs that appear to only ameliorate acute depression symptoms. The bilateral olfactory bulbectomy ( OBX ) animal model presents the advantage of mimicking the symptoms of chronic depression by means of brain surgery. Adenosine purinergic receptors A2A (A2 AR ) have been the target of interest in the field of psychiatric diseases. This study aimed to show which A2A receptor ligands exert antidepressive‐like effects in the OBX rat model. Methods Forty Sprague‐Dawley male rats were divided into four groups: control, OBX  + vehicle, OBX  +  ZM 241385, and OBX  + adenosine groups. Pharmacological treatment was administered for 14 days, and the rats were examined via the forced swim test ( FST ), open field test ( OFT ), and sucrose preference test ( SPT ). Results The OBX  +  ZM 241385 group exhibited decreased immobility time in the FST , decreased isolation time in the OFT , and reversed anhedonia behavior in the SPT compared to the vehicle group. However, no significant differences for adenosine treatment were found. Conclusions ZM 241385 administration (2 mg/kg i.p.) restored behavioral changes associated with OBX ‐induced depression.

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