Novel Pathways in the Treatment of Major Depression: Focus on the Glutamatergic System

Author:

Tomasetti Carmine1,Montemitro Chiara2,Fiengo Annastasia L.C.3,Santone Cristina1,Orsolini Laura4,Valchera Alessandro4,Carano Alessandro5,Pompili Maurizio6,Serafini Gianluca7,Perna Giampaolo8,Vellante Federica2,Martinotti Giovanni2,Giannantonio Massimo D.2,Kim Yong-Ku9,Nicola Marco D.10,Bellomo Antonello11,Ventriglio Antonio11,Fornaro Michele12,Berardis Domenico D.2

Affiliation:

1. NHS, Department of Mental Health ASL Teramo, Psychiatric Service of Diagnosis and Treatment, Hospital “Maria SS dello Splendore”, Giulianova, Italy

2. Department of Neuroscience, Imaging and Clinical Science, University , Italy

3. NHS, Department of Mental Health ASUR Marche AV5, Mental Health Unit, Ascoli Piceno, Italy

4. Polyedra Research Group, Teramo, Italy

5. Department of Mental Health, Psychiatric Service of Diagnosis and Treatment, Hospital “Madonna Del Soccorso,” NHS, San Benedetto del Tronto, Ascoli Piceno, Italy

6. Department of Neurosciences, Mental Health and Sensory Organs, Suicide Prevention Center, S. Andrea Hospital, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy

7. Department of Neuroscience, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health, Section of Psychiatry, University of Genoa, IRCCS Ospedale Policlinico San Martino, Genoa, Italy

8. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Hermanas Hospitalarias, Villa San Benedetto Menni Hospital, FoRiPsi, Albese con Cassano, Como, Italy

9. Department of Psychiatry, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

10. Institute of Psychiatry and Psychology, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy

11. Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Foggia, Foggia, Italy

12. Department of Psychiatry, University Medical School “Federico II”, Naples, Italy

Abstract

Depressive disorders represent protean psychiatric illnesses with heterogeneous clinical manifestations and a multitude of comorbidities leading to severe disability. In spite of decades of research on the pathophysiogenesis of these disorders, the wide variety of pharmacotherapies currently used to treat them is based on the modulation of monoamines, whose alteration has been considered the neurobiological foundation of depression, and consequently of its treatment. However, approximately one third to a half of patients respond partially or become refractory to monoamine-based therapies, thereby jeopardizing the therapeutic effectiveness in the real world of clinical practice. Recent scientific evidence has been pointing out the essential role of other biological systems beyond monoamines in the pathophysiology of depressive disorders, in particular, the glutamatergic neurotransmission. In the present review, we will discuss the most advanced knowledge on the involvement of glutamatergic system in the molecular mechanisms at the basis of depression pathophysiology, as well as the glutamate-based therapeutic strategies currently suggested to optimize depression treatment (e.g., ketamine). Finally, we will mention further “neurobiological targeted” approaches, based on glutamate system, with the purpose of promoting new avenues of investigation aiming at developing interventions that overstep the monoaminergic boundaries to improve depressive disorders therapy.

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.

Subject

Drug Discovery,Pharmacology

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