| September 8, 2005
Penn Awarded $1.8 Million to
Search for New
Mood-Disorder Drugs, in a Collaboration With
Wyeth Research Laboratories
(Philadelphia, PA) - The National Institute of Mental
Health (NIMH) has awarded the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine $1.8 million
over the next three years to establish a National Cooperative
Drug Discovery Group for the Treatment of Mood Disorders
(NCDDG-MD). This group is comprised of researchers from
the Center for Neurobiology at Penn and the Neuroscience
Discovery Department at Wyeth Research Laboratories,
Princeton N.J. The aim of this National Institutes of
Health (NIH)-sponsored academic-industry collaboration
is to develop new antidepressant drug treatments based
on the role of neurogenesis (the production of new neurons)
in regulating stress and depression.
“The NIH wants drug-development programs to jump-start
new approaches for creating drugs to treat depression,”
explains Irwin Lucki, PhD, Professor
of Psychiatry and principal investigator of the Penn
component of NCDDG-MD.
The Wyeth component is led by Lee Schechter, PhD, who
is the Therapeutic Area Head for Depression and Anxiety
Research in Neuroscience Discovery. “The previous
research findings demonstrating that antidepressants
can induce neurogenesis in the brain has opened up a
new and exciting area for scientific investigation delving
into novel mechanisms of antidepressant drug action,”
says Schechter. “We are very excited about this
initiative with Penn under the NCDDG-MD program.”
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), approximately
121 million people currently suffer from depression,
which can lead to reduced productivity in the workplace
and home. “Depression causes immense financial
burdens for individuals and their families, as well
as society,” echoes Lucki. WHO estimates that
the annual costs of mental illness in the U.S. is close
to $148 billion. Although effective treatments for depression
do exist, they are marked by limitations, such as side
effects and a three-to-five-week delay before they take
effect. And, less than 60 percent of patients seeking
treatment respond to current antidepressants.
In recent years, advances in imaging techniques have
allowed researchers to scan the brains of patients suffering
from depression. Such brain images show distinct shrinkage
in the hippocampus and cortex, regions known to play
a role in mediating mood and cognitive reasoning. Animal
studies reveal that chronic stress leads to similar
volume and cell loss in these brain regions, suggesting
a link between depression and stress throughout the
lifetime.
“Increasingly, we are learning that certain areas
of the brain are responsible for generating new cells,
and this renewal process is causing us to reexamine
the way that stress affects the brain,” explains
Lucki. Stress reduces the amount of neurogenesis, or
cell growth, in these areas of renewal. Conversely,
chronic administration of antidepressant drugs increases
neurogenesis. The NCDDG-MD is in the midst of identifying
compounds that facilitate neurogenesis in key areas
of the brain to develop innovative therapies for depression.
Recently, Penn and Wyeth researchers examined a hormone
called insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1) that has been
shown to promote neurogenesis. Brian Hoshaw, PhD, research
associate in the Department of Psychiatry at Penn, in
collaboration with Jessica Malberg, PhD, Senior Research
Scientist in Neuroscience Discovery at Wyeth, discovered
that IGF-1 produces behavioral effects similar to antidepressant
treatments in animal models. With further examination
of the way that IGF-1 and other neurotrophins increase
neurogenesis, the research team may be able to develop
better antidepressant drugs.
The NCDDG-MD is also developing an animal model capable
of detecting the effects of antidepressants on chronic
stress using neurogenesis. With such a model, researchers
could begin to better understand the delay in drug efficacy
of antidepressants and how this may relate to changes
in neurogenesis, suggest Lucki and Schechter.
Lucki, Hoshaw, and Penn colleagues state no financial
interests in Wyeth.
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