The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors
Arianna Rizzo
1, 2
,
Maria Zelai Garçon-Poca
1, 2
,
Amelie Essmann
1, 2
,
Adriana Jesus Souza
1, 2
,
Francisco Ciruela
1, 2
,
Jordi Bonaventura
1, 2
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2025-02-19
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 4.022
CiteScore: 22.1
Impact factor: 10.1
ISSN: 13594184, 14765578
Abstract
Esketamine represents a new class of drugs for treating mood disorders. Unlike traditional monoaminergic-based therapies, esketamine primarily targets N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR). However, esketamine is a complex drug with low affinity for NMDAR and can also bind to other targets, such as opioid receptors. Its precise mechanism of action for its antidepressant properties remains debated, as does its potential for misuse. A key component at the intersection of mood and reward processing is the dopaminergic system. In this study, we evaluated the effects of esketamine in locomotion, anxiety tests and operant responding and we used in vivo fiber photometry to explore the neurochemical effects of esketamine in the nucleus accumbens of mice. Our findings demonstrated multifaceted effects of esketamine on neurotransmitter dynamics. In freely behaving mice, esketamine increased locomotion and increased extracellular dopamine tone -by impairing dopamine clearance rather than promoting dopamine release- while decreasing glutamatergic activity. However, it decreased dopamine spontaneous release event frequency and impaired reward-evoked dopamine release, leading to a reduction in operant responding rates. These dopaminergic effects were partially, and conditionally, blocked by the opioid antagonist naloxone and required glutamatergic input. In summary, our study reveals a complex interaction between neurotransmitter systems, suggesting that the neurochemical effects of esketamine are both circuit- and state-dependent.
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Citations from 2024:
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Rizzo A. et al. The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors // Molecular Psychiatry. 2025.
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Rizzo A., Garçon-Poca M. Z., Essmann A., Souza A. J., Michaelides M., Ciruela F., Bonaventura J. The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors // Molecular Psychiatry. 2025.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1038/s41380-025-02931-3
UR - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41380-025-02931-3
TI - The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors
T2 - Molecular Psychiatry
AU - Rizzo, Arianna
AU - Garçon-Poca, Maria Zelai
AU - Essmann, Amelie
AU - Souza, Adriana Jesus
AU - Michaelides, Michael
AU - Ciruela, Francisco
AU - Bonaventura, Jordi
PY - 2025
DA - 2025/02/19
PB - Springer Nature
SN - 1359-4184
SN - 1476-5578
ER -
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@article{2025_Rizzo,
author = {Arianna Rizzo and Maria Zelai Garçon-Poca and Amelie Essmann and Adriana Jesus Souza and Michael Michaelides and Francisco Ciruela and Jordi Bonaventura},
title = {The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors},
journal = {Molecular Psychiatry},
year = {2025},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {feb},
url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s41380-025-02931-3},
doi = {10.1038/s41380-025-02931-3}
}
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