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Jihane Homman‐ludiye

Monash University

2 papers in the library · 6 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Psilocybin prevents activity-based anorexia in female rats by enhancing cognitive flexibility: contributions from 5-HT1A and 5-HT2A receptor mechanisms

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) December 13, 2023 Kyna‐anne Conn, Lk Milton, Kaixin Huang et al. 6 citations preprint

In a rat model of anorexia nervosa (activity-based anorexia), psilocybin improved body weight maintenance and facilitated cognitive flexibility, particularly by enhancing adaptation when reward contingencies were reversed. The cognitive benefits depended on signaling through the serotonin 5-HT1A receptor, as blocking that receptor negated the effects. Psilocybin also transiently altered cortical expression of serotonin receptor genes, increasing Htr2a and decreasing Htr1a transcripts, with a further reduction in Htr2a in anorexic-model rats. These findings suggest psilocybin could help break cognitive inflexibility in anorexia nervosa and indicate that therapeutic mechanisms may extend beyond 5-HT2A receptor binding.

Effects of a single dose of psilocybin on diet-induced weight loss in obese mice

March 31, 2025 Ryan J. Keenan, Rezaul Haque, Xianbo Jin et al.

A single dose of psilocybin exacerbated diet-induced weight loss over four weeks in diet-induced obese mice switched to low-fat chow, increasing susceptibility to more profound weight loss. Psilocybin modulated food intake without affecting energy expenditure. No changes in body weight or food intake occurred in mice maintained on a high-fat diet, indicating psilocybin does not directly promote weight loss or reduce food intake but may facilitate weight loss when combined with other interventions. The findings support further investigation of psychedelic compounds as an adjunct therapy for obesity.