Scientia Pharmaceutica (Aug 2022)

Antidepressant Effect of Neuropeptide Y in Models of Acute and Chronic Stress

  • Nika Andriushchenko,
  • Kira Nebogina,
  • Yana Zorkina,
  • Olga Abramova,
  • Eugene Zubkov,
  • Aleksandra Ochneva,
  • Valeria Ushakova,
  • Konstantin Pavlov,
  • Olga Gurina,
  • Vladimir Chekhonin,
  • Anna Morozova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/scipharm90030050
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 90, no. 3
p. 50

Abstract

Read online

The search for potential effective antidepressants with minimal side effects is necessary. Peptides are possible applicants for this role. We investigated the antidepressant effect of neuropeptide Y (NY), alone and in combination with clomipramine, in models of acute and chronic stress induced by ultrasound of variable frequencies. Rats were divided into the following groups: the control group, stress group, and stress groups with intranasal administration of NY (100 μg/kg) or clomipramine (7.5 mg/kg), or their combination. Rat behavior was evaluated using a sucrose preference test and forced swimming test in an acute stress model, and a sucrose preference test, forced swimming test, social interaction test, open field test, and Morris water maze test in a chronic stress model. The results of our experiment demonstrated a protective effect of intranasal NY in a model of acute stress, which was comparable to the antidepressant effect of clomipramine. When the same dose was chronically administered, NY also demonstrated an antidepressant action, although expressed in a lesser degree than clomipramine. The combination of NY and clomipramine was much less effective in the chronic stress paradigm compared to the separated drug administration, but was just as effective in the acute stress paradigm. Until now, there was no convincing evidence for the efficacy of the chronic administration of neuropeptide Y; we demonstrated its effectiveness in the animal model of depressive-like behavior. However, our hypothesis that neuropeptide Y can enhance the effect of a classical antidepressant was not confirmed.

Keywords