Conclusions
These data suggest that in rats, six alternating-day treatments with 2.5mg/kg KET do not induce apparent behavioral signatures of abuse liability despite accumulation of ΔFosB protein in the accumbens. Additionally, females are more sensitive than males to KET's locomotor-stimulant properties, both acutely and after repeated treatments. More studies are needed to determine brain regions and neural mechanisms responsible for KET-induced behavioral adaptations and to extrapolate these data to inform sex-dependent strategies for long-term KET therapy protocols for depression.
Results
Antidepressant-like threshold doses (2.5, 5.0mg/kg KET) failed to evoke a conditioned place preference in all animals, but only males positively responded to a higher dose (10mg/kg). Behavioral sensitization to 5.0 or 10mg/kg KET's locomotor-activating effects was established in both sexes, and females' sensitized response to 5.0mg/kg was greater than males'. KET-induced hyperlocomotion positively correlated with ΔFosB protein expression in the nucleus accumbens. rAAV-ΔJunD inhibition of ΔFosB-mediated transcription in the accumbens failed to block locomotor sensitization to 10mg/kg KET. Conclusions: These data suggest that in rats, six alternating-day treatments with 2.5mg/kg KET do not induce apparent behavioral signatures of abuse liability despite accumulation of ΔFosB protein in the accumbens. Additionally, females are more sensitive than males to KET's locomotor-stimulant properties, both acutely and after repeated treatments. More studies are needed to determine brain regions and neural mechanisms responsible for KET-induced behavioral adaptations and to extrapolate these data to inform sex-dependent strategies for long-term KET therapy protocols for depression.
