A single injection of imipramine affected proliferation in the hippocampus of adult Swiss mice depending on the route of administration, doses, survival time and lodging conditions

Publication date: Available online 13 June 2019Source: Journal of Chemical NeuroanatomyAuthor(s): Martina Podolan, Juliano dos Santos, Thais Walber, Fernanda Possamai, Giordano Gubert Viola, Cilene Lino de OliveiraAbstractSwiss mice may be valuable for the screening of antidepressants in preclinical trials. Acute treatment with antidepressants may affect the behaviour of Swiss mice, but the effects on their hippocampal neurogenesis remain unknown. The present work aims to assess the influence of acute treatment with antidepressants on cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus of adult Swiss mice. Cell proliferation was estimated by ex vivo counting of Ki-67 immunoreactive nuclei (Ki-67-ir) in the dentate gyrus of Swiss mice housed in standard or enriched environments, at survival-times 2 or 24 h after imipramine injection Independent of the experimental group, intraperitoneal imipramine (0 or 30 mg/kg) failed to change the number of Ki-67-ir in the hippocampus of mice. Through intracerebroventricular route, imipramine reduced the number of Ki-67-ir in the hippocampus of Swiss mice at the dose of 0.06 nmol and increased it at the dose 0.2 nmol. At the dose 0.2 nmol, not 0.06 nmol, imipramine increased the immunoreactivity to doublecortin (a marker for immature neurons) in the hippocampus of mice. The effects of intracerebroventricular injection of imipramine on neurogenesis markers were seen 24 h after the injection in mice housed in standard con...
Source: Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research