Skip to content

Bastian Hengerer

CNS Diseases Research, Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH & Co. KG, Biberach an der Riss, Germany.

1 paper in the library · 26 citations · publishing 2024

Papers

Rapid-acting antidepressant drugs modulate affective bias in rats

Science Translational Medicine January 10, 2024 Katie Kamenish, Roberto Arban, Aslihan Selimbeyoglu et al. 26 citations

Negative cognitive biases—where mood colors learning and memory—are a core feature of major depressive disorder, and reversing them may be key to how rapid-acting antidepressants work. In rats, a single dose of ketamine, scopolamine, or psilocybin selectively weakened a negative affective bias induced in an associative learning task. Low doses of ketamine and psilocybin, but not high doses, reversed the valence of the bias 24 hours later. Only psilocybin produced a lasting positive bias that depended on new learning. Ketamine's relearning effects required protein synthesis in the medial prefrontal cortex and could be altered by cue reactivation, pointing to experience-dependent neural plasticity as a shared mechanism for both the rapid and sustained effects of these drugs.