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Boris Heifets

Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

1 paper in the library · 37 citations · publishing 2024

Papers

MDMA enhances empathy-like behaviors in mice via 5-HT release in the nucleus accumbens.

Science advances April 26, 2024 Ben Rein, Kendall Raymond, Cali Boustani et al. 37 citations

MDMA, a psychoactive drug known for its prosocial effects, enhances empathy-like behaviors in mice by increasing serotonin signaling in the nucleus accumbens. The drug, whether given systemically or infused directly into this brain region, strengthens the social transfer of pain and analgesia, a behavioral test of empathy. Optogenetically stimulating serotonin release in the nucleus accumbens mimics MDMA's effects, confirming serotonin's role. MDMA also restores deficits in empathy-like behaviors in a mouse model of autism lacking the Shank3 gene. The findings indicate that serotonin signaling in the nucleus accumbens is a core mechanism underlying MDMA's empathogenic effects.