Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Muscarinic Cholinergic Receptor Imaging in Depression
The purpose of this study is to use brain imaging technology to examine the role of certain
brain receptors and the nervous system chemical acetylcholine in major depression.
The cholinergic system involves the regulation of neurotransmitters and the brain receptors
to which they bind. Evidence suggests that the cholinergic system may play a role in the
development of depression. Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter that binds to certain brain
receptors called muscarinic cholinergic receptors. Cholinomimetic drugs (drugs that stimulate
the cholinergic system) often exacerbate depressive symptoms in people with mood disorders
and in healthy individuals. This increase in depressive symptoms may be caused by stimulation
of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs), but further study is needed to confirm this.
This study will use positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
to study the function of mAChRs in individuals with depression.
Participants in this study will undergo a physical examination, psychiatric interviews,
neuropsychological tests, PET and MRI scans, and rating scales of depression, anxiety, and
negative thinking symptoms. Questions about behavior and functioning will be asked and blood
samples will be collected for genetic analysis.
Several paths of evidence converge in implicating a role for the cholinergic system in the
pathophysiology of affective illness. In both unipolar depressed and euthymic bipolar
subjects, cholinomimetic drugs (i.e., muscarinic agonists, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors)
exacerbate depressive signs and symptoms such as dysphoria, psychomotor retardation,
impairment of attention and memory, hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis hyperactivity and
sleep EEG abnormalities. In healthy subjects, the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
physostigmine elicits a range of depressive symptoms including dysphoria, anergia,
psychomotor slowing, emotional lability, sleep disturbances, memory and concentration
impairment, and with higher doses, tearfulness and depression. These effects have been shown
to reflect stimulation of muscarinic receptors. Cholinomimetics also exacerbate behavioral
despair in putative animal models of depression. Conversely, the anticholinergic agent
biperidine improved symptoms of depression in a placebo controlled study. Moreover,
muscarinic cholinomimetics and a choline rich nutrient, lecithin (phosphatidylcholine) exert
antimanic effects in bipolar subjects.
Potentially consistent with these observations, depressed subjects exhibit hypersensitivity
to cholinomimetic agents. Administration of muscarinic cholinergic agonists, ACh releasing
agents or acetylcholinesterase inhibitors induce exaggerated effects on REM density and
latency in depressed subjects than in healthy controls. In addition, both manic and depressed
bipolar subjects show increased pupillary sensitivity to the muscarinic cholinergic agonist
pilocarpine relative to controls.
Despite the data implicating the mAChR receptor system in mood disorders, no direct in vivo
investigations of the central mAChR have been performed in depressed subjects. A novel PET
radioligand, [(18)F]FP-TZTP was recently developed by Eckelman as a selective agonist of M(2)
receptors. Because the M(2) receptor functions predominately as a presynaptic
release-controlling autoreceptor, decreased distribution volume (V) of this receptor could
conceivably give rise to increased postsynaptic muscarinic receptor sensitivity.
This application proposes a pilot PET study of M(2) receptor distribution volume in currently
depressed subjects with major depressive disorder (n=30), currently depressed subjects with
bipolar disorder (n=30), and psychiatrically healthy controls (n=30). The proposed pilot
study will test the central hypothesis that M(2) receptor V is decreased in regions where
they are primarily located presynaptically in depressed subjects relative to healthy
controls. The proposed study will advance knowledge regarding the pathophysiology of
depression.
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