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Benjamin E. Rabichow

WinnMed

1 paper in the library · 1 citation · publishing 2024

Papers

Psilocybin causes sex, time, and dose dependent alterations in brain signaling pathways

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) December 17, 2024 J. Hudson Barnett, Kennedi T. Todd, Joseph Benetatos et al. 1 citation preprint

Psilocybin, a psychedelic tryptamine, shows promise for treating conditions like treatment-resistant depression and PTSD by rapidly improving depression scores. Its primary mechanism involves activating the serotonin 2A receptor, but downstream therapeutic effects remain unclear. This study analyzed dose- and sex-dependent transcriptional changes in mouse forebrains at 8 hours, 24 hours, and 7 days after a single low (0.25 mg/kg) or high (1 mg/kg) dose. Females showed faster transcriptional changes and attenuation at low doses compared to males, and more robust responses to high doses at early timepoints. Low-dose effects persisted at 7 days, outlasting high-dose changes, and involved pathways related to neuronal differentiation and neurogenesis. These sexually divergent and temporal molecular effects should inform treatment strategies and timing with cognitive behavioral therapy.