The serotonin 1B receptor is required for some of the behavioral effects of psilocybin in mice.
Molecular psychiatry May 1, 2026 Sixtine Fleury, Katherine M Nautiyal 2 citations
Psilocybin's persisting antidepressant-like effects in mice involve not only the serotonin 2A receptor but also the serotonin 1B receptor (5-HT1BR). Mice lacking 5-HT1BR showed altered brain-wide neural activity after psilocybin, measured by c-Fos expression in emotion- and cognition-related regions such as the amygdala. While the acute head twitch response was unaffected, 5-HT1BR absence reduced psilocybin-induced hypolocomotion. Longer-term effects on anhedonia and anxiety-like behavior depended on 5-HT1BR, with influences from sex and stress. Network analysis identified circuits through which 5-HT1BR may modulate psilocybin's effects. The findings suggest 5-HT1BR contributes to psilocybin's enduring antidepressant-like actions in mice.