PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)
A study of roflumilast treatment on functional and structural changes in hippocampus in depressed Adult male Wistar rats.
Abstract
Depression is a common stress disability disorder that affects higher mental functions including emotion, cognition, and behavior. It may be mediated by inflammatory cytokines that interfere with neuroendocrine function, and synaptic plasticity. Therefore, reductions in inflammation might contribute to treatment response. The current study aims to evaluate the role of Protein Kinase (PKA)- cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB)- brain derived neurotropic factor (BDNF) signaling pathway in depression and the effects of roflumilast (PDE4 inhibitor) as potential antidepressant on the activity of the PKA-CREB-BDNF signaling pathway, histology, and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. Forty Adult male Wistar rats were divided into 4 groups: Control group, Positive Control group: similar to the controls but received Roflumilast (3 mg / kg / day) by oral gavage for the last 4 weeks of the experiment, Depressed group which were exposed to chronic stress for 6 weeks, and Roflumilast-treated group which were exposed to chronic stress for 6 weeks and treated by Roflumilast (3 mg / kg / day) by oral gavage for the last 4 weeks of the experiment. The depressed group showed significant increase in immobility time with significant decrease in swimming and struggling times, significant decrease in hippocampal PKA, CERB, BDNF, Dopamine, Cortisone, and Superoxide dismutase while hippocampal Phosphodiesterase-E4, Interleukin-6, and Malondialdhyde levels were significantly elevated. These findings were significantly reversed upon Roflumilast treatment. Therefore, it could be concluded that depression is a neurodegenerative inflammatory disease and oxidative stress plays a key role in depression. Roflumilast treatment attenuated the depression behavior in rats denoting its neuroprotective, and anti-inflammatory effects.