Abstract
Methylone (3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylcathinone) is a rapid-acting entactogen that has been shown to have significant benefits in patients with post-traumatic stress disorder and major depressive disorder and is well tolerated in phase 1 clinical trials. A recent preclinical study reported that methylone produced robust antidepressant-like actions in naïve rats. However, its antidepressant effects on various stress-related psychopathologies and other neuropsychological actions remain unclear. In the present study, we examined the antidepressant-relevant effects of methylone in learned helplessness (LH) and social defeat stress C57BL/6J male mouse models and further explored its sociability-relevant neuropsychological actions. Our results indicate that methylone produces antidepressant-relevant effects on the helpless phenotype, LH-evoked depressive-like behaviors, and psychosocial stress-induced social avoidance, and induced depressive-like behaviors. In addition, methylone was found to enhance social preference and increase various social behaviors, including social contact, sniffing, allogrooming, and following. Moreover, methylone appeared to elevate empathy-like phenotypes and was also found to increase helping-like behavior. Overall, the present results suggest that methylone plays an antidepressant-like role in various stress-relevant psychopathologies and could be an ideal antidepressant candidate. In addition, novel findings on the elevated tendencies of social preference and empathy-like and helping-like phenotypes reveal that methylone may have potential application in patients with social deficits.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 109787 |
Pages (from-to) | 109787 |
Journal | Neuropharmacology |
Volume | 242 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 01 01 2024 |
Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Keywords
- Antidepressant
- Depressive-like behavior
- Empathy-like behavior
- Helping-like behavior
- Methylone
- Sociability
- Humans
- Depressive Disorder, Major/drug therapy
- Mice, Inbred C57BL
- Stress, Psychological/drug therapy
- Methamphetamine
- Rats
- Male
- Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology
- Depression/drug therapy
- Animals
- Mice
- Disease Models, Animal