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Browsing by Subject "LSD"

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  • Enberg, Emma (2021)
    Kiinnostus käyttää psykedeelejä, kuten lysergihapon dietyyliamidia (LSD) ja psilosybiiniä, erinäisten psykiatristen sairauksien hoidossa ei ole jättänyt huomiotta päihteiden väärinkäyttöä. Tutkimukset ovat osoittaneet alustavia positiivisia vaikutuksia LSD:n käyttämisessä erinäisten addiktioiden, kuten kokaiini-, nikotiini- ja alkoholiriippuvuuksien hoidossa. LSD:n on raportoitu auttaneen joitain alkoholismista kärsiviä pysymään raittiina jopa 6-12 kuukautta yksittäisen LSD annoksen jälkeen. Valitettavasti näitä tuloksia on hankala tulkita, ja vaikutusten taustalla olevat mekanismit tunnetaan huonosti. Tutkimme hiirimallimme avulla, kuinka yksittäinen LSD annos vaikuttaa ahmimiskäyttäytymiseen. Käytimme sukroosiliuosta ahmivaa eläinmallia palkkionottamiskäyttäytymisen mallintamiseen, mikä on yksi addiktioihin liittyvän käyttäytymisen tunnusmerkeistä. Tutkimuksemme tavoitteena oli selvittää vaikuttaako LSD palkkionottamiskäyttäytymiseen, ja siten mahdollisesti aivojen palkkiojärjestelmään. LSD -annostelu (0,05 ja 0,1 mg/kg, i.p.) vähensi akuutisti sukroosiliuoksen ahmimiskäyttäytymistä, mutta vaikutus loppui viikon kuluessa. Tästä havaitusta akuutista vaikutuksesta huolimatta erot ryhmien välillä eivät olleet tilastollisesti merkittäviä. Täten oletettiin, että nettovaikutukset aivojen palkkiojärjestelmään ovat epätodennäköisiä. Kuitenkin pelkän i.p. injektion (10 ml/kg) havaittiin vaikuttavan veden juomiseen. Havaitsimme merkittävän piikin veden juonnissa injektointipäivänä, mikä palautui normaalitasolle jo seuraavaan päivään mennessä. Nämä tulokset johtivat jatkotutkimukseemme, jossa osoitettiin injektion aiheuttavan piikin vedenjuontiin riippumatta siitä, injektoidaanko saliinia vai LSD:tä. Tätä vaikutusta ei enää havaittu, mikäli injektioita annettiin perättäisinä päivinä, mutta jopa yhden tai kahden päivän väli injektioiden välillä riitti palauttamaan injektion aiheuttaman piikin vedenjuontiin. Koska onnistuimme poistamaan vedenjuontiin aiheutuneen vaikutuksen toistetuilla saliini-injektioilla, eikä vaikutus palautunut injektoitaessa LSD:tä, voimme todeta, että vaikutus liittyi injektiotoimenpiteeseen. Keskeisin havaintomme tässä tutkimuksessa oli, ettei LSD:llä ole merkittävää akuuttia vaikutusta sukroosiliuoksen ahmimiskäyttäytymiseen tässä hiirimallissa.
  • Pastor Muñoz, Paula (2024)
    Accumulating evidence indicates that the plasticity-inducing effects of conventional antidepressant drugs like fluoxetine are mediated by their direct binding to TrkB. TrkB is the receptor of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a neurotrophic factor of critical importance for neuron survival and synaptic plasticity. In addition, it has recently been reported that LSD and psilocybin, two psychedelic compounds with therapeutic potential, also bind to TrkB with higher affinity than antidepressants. It has been proposed that the differences in binding affinity between conventional antidepressants and psychedelics may help explain the much faster and longer-lasting antidepressant effects of psychedelics. Psychedelics and classical antidepressants bind to the transmembrane domain of TrkB dimers, where they act as positive allosteric modulators by potentiating the action of endogenous BDNF. The transmembrane binding sites of LSD and fluoxetine, despite being partially overlapping, are distinct and induce different conformational changes when bound to TrkB dimers. However, it is still unknown whether there are differences in the TrkB dimerization dynamics and neurotrophic signalling pathways induced by psychedelics when compared to conventional antidepressants. In this study, we investigated whether psychedelics and classical antidepressants promote TrkB dimerization and neurotrophic signalling in a differential manner. The effects of psychedelics on the TrkB dimerization dynamics and neurotrophic signalling associated with plasticity were studied treating N2a cells and primary cortical neuronal cultures with LSD or fluoxetine. Dimerization of the TrkB receptor in the presence of experimental compounds is assayed by protein-fragment complementation assay (PCA). Results show a significant dimerization in cells treated with LSD, whereas non-significant response in the ones treated with fluoxetine. The phosphorylation state of the neuronal TrkB receptor in three different tyrosines (Y515, Y706, and Y816) was checked as a marker of its activation by Western blot. Primary cortical cultures were treated with classical antidepressant fluoxetine (10uM) or psychedelic LSD (100nM) for 1 hour, when their effects on TrkB phosphorylation were compared. This experiment showed a significant increase of phosphorylation in TrkB Y816 after LSD treatment in cortical neuronal cultures, while fluoxetine treatment showed no significant effect. This indicates that LSD is able to activate the BDNF-TrkB signalling pathway associated with PLCg1 recruitment and induction of plasticity at an early time point and with a much lower concentration than fluoxetine, which would support LSD’s much more potent antidepressant and plasticity-inducing effects when compared to fluoxetine’s. Together, these results suggest that psychedelics that bind to TrkB, like LSD, are more potent than classical antidepressants in inducing TrkB-BDNF signalling. Overall, this study provides further evidence that TrkB is a critical mediator of psychedelics’ actions on neurotrophic signalling preceding their plasticity-enhancing and antidepressant effects and sheds more light on the common and differential mechanisms used by psychedelics and conventional antidepressants to produce their therapeutic effects.
  • Kuutti, Mirjami (2022)
    In recent years, psychedelics have shown promise in the treatment of conditions like depression and addiction. The therapeutic effects of psychedelics have been linked to their ability to increase plasticity in the brain, an effect that has also been seen for antidepressants. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a member of the neurotrophin family, which has an important role in the development of the nervous system, as well as promotion of neuronal survival and differentiation during adulthood. BDNF, through its receptor TrkB, has been implicated in antidepressant action, and BDNF-TrkB signalling is involved in many aspects of plasticity. Recently, antidepressants have been reported to bind directly to TrkB, and through this binding mediate their plasticity-enhancing, as well as behavioural effects. Psychedelics have been shown to increase structural and functional plasticity, but the mechanisms behind these effects are not fully understood. For example, the serotonergic receptor 5-HT2A is known to be behind the acute hallucinogenic effects of psychedelics, but its role in plasticity is still debated. The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanisms of LSD-induced plasticity. The dimerization of TrkB was examined after LSD treatment in the protein-fragment complementation assay (PCA). Phosphorylation of TrkB signalling markers mTOR and ERK, which have known effects on plasticity, was assessed in Western blot, and the total expression of BDNF was examined with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The timeline of the effects was investigated, and the involvement of 5-HT2A in TrkB dimerization and the phosphorylation of ERK was assessed by combining LSD treatment with the 5-HT2A antagonist M100907. Dimerization was also assessed in a TrkB mutant (Y433F) that has previously been shown to disrupt antidepressant effects on plasticity. These experiments showed that LSD treatment increased TrkB dimerization as well as phosphorylation of mTOR and ERK. The Y433F mutation interfered with LSD-induced TrkB dimerization, but the effects of LSD on TrkB dimerization or ERK phosphorylation were not blocked by M100907. Together, these data suggest that 5-HT2A is not involved in LSD-induced promotion of TrkB dimerization or ERK phosphorylation. The increases in phosphorylation and dimerization were found to be most robust after a 1 h LSD treatment, however an increase in BDNF expression was seen in cortical neuron cultures only after a 24 h treatment with LSD. The results reported in this study support the view that 5-HT2A might not be needed for the plasticity-inducing effects of psychedelics. If this is true, the development of treatments that target plasticity without hallucinatory effects could be possible. Overall, this research provides insight into the mechanisms of LSD-induced plasticity and offers new and interesting directions for future research in the field.
  • Rastogi, Neetika (2024)
    This thesis investigates whether the antidepressant-like and plasticity-promoting effects of LSD depend on TrkB expression among parvalbumin-positive interneurons (PV+ INs). Given the pivotal role of PV+ INs in facilitating critical-period-like plasticity, both during development and under the influence of conventional antidepressants, we hypothesized they may be involved in mediating psychedelic-induced neuroplasticity. Our findings challenge prevailing hypotheses, suggesting that LSD's plasticity-promoting effects may not rely on PV+ INs. We found that LSD did not increase the spine density of PV+ INs among wildtype mice, nor affected the expression of parvalbumin in PV+ INs or the perineuronal nets (PNNs) that enwrap them. Unexpectedly, we found that LSD did have subtle effects on PV+ IN spine density and the expression of parvalbumin in a mouse model with reduced TrkB expression among PV+ INs, suggesting a possible kind of compensatory mechanism at play. Our results reveal the multifaceted nature of LSD's actions on plasticity, shedding light on its therapeutic potential and prompting further exploration into its underlying mechanisms.