Having a different form of a gene that regulates the brain chemical
noradrenaline influences how well men remember negative memories after
taking the antidepressant drug reboxetine.This is according to a study published in the October 23 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. The findings demonstrate how genes can influence antidepressant response. While it is normal for our strongest memories to be associated with
emotional experiences, previous studies suggest the heightened recall
of negative events may be linked to depression and anxiety disorders.
Research also shows that reboxetine, which exclusively affects brain
levels of noradrenaline, reduces the tendency of people with depression
to recall negative memories. In the current study, Ayana Gibbs, MD, PhD, Theodora Duka, MD, PhD, and
others at the University of Sussex examined how reboxetine influences
emotional memories in healthy men with a variant form of the α-2B
adrenoceptor gene (ADRA2B), which contains the instructions for a type
of noradrenaline receptor. The researchers found that while reboxetine
weakened aversive memory in people with the common form of ADRA2B, the
drug did not change aversive memory in people with the variant gene
form. "Researchers are increasingly interested in how antidepressants like
reboxetine affect the way emotional information is processed and how
this information could be used to predict the drugs that are most
likely to be successful antidepressants," Gibbs said. "Our study
suggests genetic makeup is another important piece of the puzzle." More than 100 healthy white men participated in the University of
Sussex study, where they received a genetic test to see if they had the
ADRA2B variant (30 percent of whites do). They were then randomly
assigned to receive a single dose of reboxetine or a sugar (placebo)
pill. After waiting a couple of hours for the drug to be absorbed into
the bloodstream, the men viewed a series of positive, negative, and
neutral images on a computer screen. Such images included pictures of
children riding a rollercoaster ride, the scene of an accident, and a
man looking out of a window. Thirty minutes later, they were asked to
write descriptions of as many pictures as they could remember. While all participants remembered the positive and negative pictures
better than the neutral ones, the participants with the ADRA2B variant
recalled more negative pictures � an effect that remained even in those
who received the reboxetine treatment. "This study is good news for the scientific community, which has
struggled for decades to identify factors influencing the admittedly
moderate efficacy of antidepressants," explained Andreas
Papassotiropoulos, MD, who studies how genes influence memory at the
University of Basel and was not involved with this study. "This study
elegantly demonstrates the importance of the concept of aversive memory
in psychiatric disease and paves the way for further experiments
dealing with the molecular underpinnings of antidepressant efficacy,"
he added. According to Gibbs, future studies will explore whether the ADRA2B
variant influences the effectiveness of reboxetine in other groups,
including women, and establish whether similar effects are observed in
patients with depression or anxiety disorders.
Source:The Journal of Neuroscience
No comments:
Post a Comment