Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is one of the top three causes of disability worldwide, but only 60-70% of
patients with MDD respond to first-line therapies, and responders have lasting impairments and recurrences.
Thus, further research into the molecular basis of depression and antidepressant action is needed. Using
chemogenetic techniques, our lab has established a causal relationship between changes in adult hippocampal
neurogenesis and anxiety/depression-like behavior in mice. Further, we have shown that acutely increasing new
neuron activity without an increase in neurogenesis is sufficient to rapidly induce antidepressant effects. The
behavioral consequences of increasing new neuron activity occur within hours, whereas the effects of increasing
the number of new neurons and their integration into the hippocampal Dentate Gyrus (DG) takes weeks. Most
antidepressants have a therapeutic lag of weeks in patients, but earlier onset of antidepressant effects correlates
with decreased suicidal behavior and increased likelihood of remission, making rapid-acting antidepressants
desirable. At subanesthetic doses, the NMDA receptor antagonist ketamine exerts antidepressant effects within
hours and has sustained therapeutic effects lasting weeks. Understanding its mechanism may inform new
antidepressants with minimal therapeutic lag and fewer significant adverse effects. The neurogenic niche is
necessary for ketamine's sustained effects and a single dose of ketamine accelerates neurogenesis. I have
found that ketamine increases both neurogenesis in the DG and the activity of DG neurons. Here, I propose that
effects of ketamine on newborn neuron activity mediate ketamine’s rapid behavioral effect, whereas effects on
neurogenesis underlie its longer-term behavioral effect. In Aim 1, I will determine the contribution of newborn
neuron activity to ketamine’s acute behavioral effects. I will define how silencing new neurons alters ketamine’s
acute effects in naïve mice and mice exposed to unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS). To inducibly and
specifically silence new neurons, I will use Cre-inducible expression of an inhibitory Designer Receptor
Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADD) in neural stem/progenitor cells and their progeny. I will
administer ketamine and determine how new neuron silencing alters ketamine’s effect on mouse
anxiety/depression-like behavior. In Aim 2, I will examine mechanisms of ketamine’s sustained effects on
neurogenesis and behavior and determine if they depend on a reduction in BMP signaling. Neurogenesis in the
DG is inhibited by BMP signaling, and inhibition of BMP signaling increases neurogenesis and exerts an
antidepressant effect. The behavioral effects of the Selective Serotonin Receptor Inhibitor (SSRI) fluoxetine are
mediated by decreased BMP signaling, and I have found that ketamine treatment similarly reduces BMP
signaling. I will maintain high BMP signaling in naïve mice and mice exposed to UCMS, administer ketamine,
and measure behavioral effects. While ketamine use poses its own risks, understanding the mechanisms of its
antidepressant effects may inform a new generation of rapid-acting antidepressant medications.