Stress-induced changes in cerebral metabolites, hippocampal volume, and cell proliferation are prevented by antidepressant treatment with tianeptine
- Boldizsár Czéh*,
- Thomas Michaelis†,
- Takashi Watanabe†,
- Jens Frahm†,
- Gabriel de Biurrun*,
- Marja van Kampen*,
- Alessandro Bartolomucci*, and
- Eberhard Fuchs*‡
- *Division of Neurobiology, German Primate Center, 37077 Göttingen, Germany; and †Biomedizinische NMR Forschungs GmbH am Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische Chemie, 37070 Göttingen, Germany
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Communicated by Bruce S. McEwen, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY (received for review June 16, 2001)
Abstract
Stress-induced structural remodeling in the adult hippocampus, involving debranching and shortening of dendrites and suppression of neurogenesis, provides a cellular basis for understanding the impairment of neural plasticity in the human hippocampus in depressive illness. Accordingly, reversal of structural remodeling may be a desirable goal for antidepressant therapy. The present study investigated the effect of tianeptine, a modified tricyclic antidepressant, in the chronic psychosocial stress model of adult male tree shrews (Tupaia belangeri), a model with high validity for research on the pathophysiology of major depression. Animals were subjected to a 7-day period of psychosocial stress to elicit stress-induced endocrine and central nervous alterations before the onset of daily oral administration of tianeptine (50 mg/kg). The psychosocial stress continued throughout the treatment period of 28 days. Brain metabolite concentrations were determined in vivo by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus was quantified by using BrdUrd immunohistochemistry, and hippocampal volume was measured post mortem. Chronic psychosocial stress significantly decreased in vivo concentrations of N-acetyl-aspartate (−13%), creatine and phosphocreatine (−15%), and choline-containing compounds (−13%). The proliferation rate of the granule precursor cells in the dentate gyrus was reduced (−33%). These stress effects were prevented by the simultaneous administration of tianeptine yielding normal values. In stressed animals treated with tianeptine, hippocampal volume increased above the small decrease produced by stress alone. These findings provide a cellular and neurochemical basis for evaluating antidepressant treatments with regard to possible reversal of structural changes in brain that have been reported in depressive disorders.
Footnotes
Abbreviations
- MRS,
- magnetic resonance spectroscopy;
- NAA,
- N-acetyl-aspartate;
- Cr,
- creatine and phosphocreatine;
- Cho,
- choline-containing compounds;
- Ins,
- myo-inositol;
- HPA,
- hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal;
- NMDA,
- N-methyl-d-aspartate
- Received June 16, 2001.
- Accepted August 14, 2001.
- Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences



