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M. Picciotto

1 paper in the library · 345 citations · publishing 2019

Papers

GABA interneurons are the cellular trigger for ketamine's rapid antidepressant actions.

Journal of Clinical Investigation November 19, 2019 Danielle M. Gerhard, Santosh Pothula, Rong‐jian Liu et al. 345 citations

A single low dose of ketamine produces rapid and lasting antidepressant effects by blocking NMDA receptors containing the GluN2B subunit on specific GABA-releasing interneurons in the medial prefrontal cortex. Removing GluN2B from somatostatin-expressing interneurons prevented or masked ketamine's antidepressant actions and revealed sex-specific differences in excitatory signals onto principal neurons. The findings indicate that GluN2B-NMDA receptors on GABA interneurons are the initial cellular trigger for ketamine's rapid antidepressant effects.