Strain in the Midbrain: Impact of Traumatic Brain Injury on the Central Serotonin System

Author:

O’Connell Christopher J.1,Brown Ryan S.1,Peach Taylor M.1,Traubert Owen D.2,Schwierling Hana C.1,Notorgiacomo Gabrielle A.3,Robson Matthew J.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pharmaceutical Sciences, James L. Winkle College of Pharmacy, University of Cincinnati, 231 Albert Sabin Way, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA

3. College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA

4. Neuroscience Graduate Program, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45267, USA

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a pervasive public health crisis that severely impacts the quality of life of affected individuals. Like peripheral forms of trauma, TBI results from extraordinarily heterogeneous environmental forces being imparted on the cranial space, resulting in heterogeneous disease pathologies. This has made therapies for TBI notoriously difficult to develop, and currently, there are no FDA-approved pharmacotherapies specifically for the acute or chronic treatment of TBI. TBI is associated with changes in cognition and can precipitate the onset of debilitating psychiatric disorders like major depressive disorder (MDD), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Complicating these effects of TBI, FDA-approved pharmacotherapies utilized to treat these disorders often fail to reach the desired level of efficacy in the context of neurotrauma. Although a complicated association, decades of work have linked central serotonin (5-HT) neurotransmission as being involved in the etiology of a myriad of neuropsychiatric disorders, including MDD and GAD. 5-HT is a biogenic monoamine neurotransmitter that is highly conserved across scales of biology. Though the majority of 5-HT is isolated to peripheral sites such as the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, 5-HT neurotransmission within the CNS exerts exquisite control over diverse biological functions, including sleep, appetite and respiration, while simultaneously establishing normal mood, perception, and attention. Although several key studies have begun to elucidate how various forms of neurotrauma impact central 5-HT neurotransmission, a full determination of precisely how TBI disrupts the highly regulated dynamics of 5-HT neuron function and/or 5-HT neurotransmission has yet to be conceptually or experimentally resolved. The purpose of the current review is, therefore, to integrate the disparate bodies of 5-HT and TBI research and synthesize insight into how new combinatorial research regarding 5-HT neurotransmission and TBI may offer an informed perspective into the nature of TBI-induced neuropsychiatric complications.

Funder

BBRF NARSAD Young Investigator Award

PhRMA Foundation Pharmacology Research Starter Grant (MJR), the University of Cincinnati Graduate Student Government

Military Burn Research Program Idea Development Award

American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET) Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship

University of Cincinnati James L. Winkle College of Pharmacy

University of Cincinnati Office of Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference144 articles.

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