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Sen Ye

School of Pharmacy, Basic Medical Sciences, Health Science Center, Ningbo University, 818 Fenghua Rd, Ningbo, Zhejiang, 315211, PR China.

1 paper in the library · 6 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

S-ketamine ameliorates post-stroke depression in mice via attenuation of neuroinflammation, synaptic restoration, and BDNF pathway activation.

Biochemical and biophysical research communications July 8, 2025 Jiaxin Tian, Yanhong Xie, Sen Ye et al. 6 citations

A single acute dose of S-ketamine (10 mg/kg) given to mice with post-stroke depression (PSD) alleviated depressive-like behaviors for at least five days. The treatment reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines in the medial prefrontal cortex, increased dendritic spine density and synaptic proteins (SYP, PSD-95), and upregulated brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) along with related signaling molecules (TrkB, p-Akt, p-Erk, p-CaMKII, p-CREB). These findings suggest S-ketamine acts through anti-inflammatory, synaptic enhancing, and BDNF pathway modulating effects, offering promise for PSD treatment.