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Work could lead to first drug for post-traumatic stress disorder
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--Researchers from MIT's Picower Institute for Learning
and Memory have uncovered a molecular mechanism that governs the formation
of fears stemming from traumatic events. The work could lead to the first
drug to treat the millions of adults who suffer each year from persistent,
debilitating fears - including hundreds of soldiers returning from
conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The team will report their results in the July 15 advance online
publication of Nature Neuroscience.
A study conducted by the Army in 2004 found that one in eight soldiers
returning from Iraq reported symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
According to the National Center for PTSD in the United States, around
eight percent of the population will have PTSD symptoms at some point in
their lives. Some 5.2 million adults have PTSD during a given year, the
center reports.
Li-Huei Tsai, Picower Professor of Neuroscience in the Department of
Brain and Cognitive Sciences, and colleagues show that inhibiting a kinase
(kinases are enzymes that change proteins) called Cdk5 facilitates the
extinction of fear learned in a particular context. Conversely, the
learned fear persisted when the kinase's activity was increased in the
hippocampus, the brain's center for storing memories.
Cdk5, paired with the protein p35, helps new brain cells, or neurons,
form and migrate to their correct positions during early brain
development. In the current work, the MIT researchers looked at how Cdk5
affects the ability to form and eliminate fear-related memories.
"Remarkably, inhibiting Cdk5 facilitated extinction of learned fear in
mice. This data points to a promising therapeutic avenue to treat
emotional disorders and raises hope for patients suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder or phobia," Tsai said.
Emotional disorders such as post-traumatic stress and panic attacks
stem from the inability of the brain to stop experiencing the fear
associated with a specific incident or series of incidents. For some
people, upsetting memories of traumatic events do not go away on their
own, or may even get worse over time, severely affecting their lives.
Treating these disorders involves methods geared toward making the
behavior go away, or become extinct, but the molecular mechanisms
underlying the extinction process are not well understood. However, Tsai
said, studies have shown that some of the molecular machinery that
initially encodes the troubling memories also regulates their extinction.
In the current work, genetically engineered mice received mild foot
shocks in a certain environment and were re-exposed to the same
environment without the foot shock. Mice with increased levels of Cdk5
activity had more trouble letting go--or extinguishing--the memory of the
foot shock and continued to freeze in fear. Conversely, in mice whose Cdk5
activity was inhibited, the bad memory of the shocks disappeared when the
mice learned that they no longer needed to fear the environment where the
foot shocks had once occurred.
"In our study, we employ mice to show that extinction of learned fear
depends on counteracting components of a molecular pathway involving the
protein kinase Cdk5," said Tsai, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator. "We found that Cdk5 activity prevents extinction, at least
in part by negatively affecting the activity of another key kinase.
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