Authors
S. Chourbaji, A. Urani, I. Inta, C. Sanchis-Segura, C. Brandwein et al.
Lab
Central Institute of Mental Health (ZI), J5, Mannheim, Germany ; University of Heidelberg, Department of Neurology, Heidelberg, Germany.
Journal
Neurobiology of Diseasen
Abstract
Cytokine-dependent mechanisms in the CNS have been implicated in the pathogenesis of depression. Interleukin-6 is upregulated in depressed patients and dowregulated by antidepressants. It is, however, unknown whether IL-6 is involved in the pathogenesis of depression. We subjected IL-6-deficient mice (IL-6_/_) to depression-related tests (learned helplessness, forced swimming, tail suspension, sucrose preference). We also investigated IL-6 in the hippocampus of stressed wild-type mice. IL-6_/_ mice showed reduced despair in the forced swim, and tail suspension test, and enhanced hedonic behavior. Moreover, IL-6_/_ mice exhibited resistance to helplessness. This resistance may be caused by the lack of IL-6, because stress increased IL-6 expression in wild-type hippocampi. This suggests that IL-6 is a component in molecular mechanisms in the pathogenesis of depression. IL-6_/_ mice represent tools to study IL-6-dependent signaling pathways in the pathophysiology of depression in vivo. Moreover, these mice may support the screening of compounds for depression by altering cytokine-mediated signaling.
BIOSEB Instruments Used:
Tail Suspension Test - Wireless (BIO-TST5)