Saskatoon StarPhoenix

U of S research may lead to better antidepres­sants

- FEDERICA GIANNELLI

University of Saskatchew­an research may hold promise for producing newer, faster-acting antidepres­sants using a protein naturally produced by the brain.

Current medication­s work on only about half of patients and take around one month to work, often with significan­t side effects.

“There is an urgent need for new antidepres­sants that work more quickly and in a higher proportion of patients,” said neuroscien­ce professor Lisa Kalynchuk.

Presented at an internatio­nal conference, Kalynchuk’s research in an animal model shows that a protein called reelin has an antidepres­sant effect in just one day. Her PhD student, Kyle Brymer, has been the first to demonstrat­e that this protein can also reverse structural changes in the brain caused by depression.

“This research could change how depression is treated,” said Kalynchuk. “If research and trials go well on rats, our work may eventually lead to developing the first new drug in 50 years with a new way of acting in the body.”

Pharmacy professor Hector Caruncho, who teams up with Kalynchuk on her project, found that people with mental illness such as schizophre­nia and depression have low quantities of reelin in their brains. This deficiency affects the release of chemicals that regulate communicat­ion between neurons, and affect the ability of neurons to connect, change and adapt over time in response to experience.

Funded by the federal agency NSERC and Saskatchew­an Health Research Foundation, the team aims to find out whether returning reelin to normal levels could work as an antidepres­sant in rats.

By injecting stress hormones, Brymer simulated depression in rats. Then, during trials, he infused reelin directly into the brains of the rats.

Brymer found that reelin acted faster than current antidepres­sants on most of the rats. He also found evidence that the protein could still affect the brains of these animals up to a week after just one infusion. This may set reelin apart from most antidepres­sants, which have to be taken daily by patients.

The researcher­s caution that more long-term research on rats is needed to better determine how long reelin is effective and its potential side effects. Developmen­t of a drug for humans is still a long way off. The team is now conducting further testing on rats to investigat­e less invasive but equally effective ways to treat with reelin.

The project is part of the U of S Neuroscien­ce Cluster, which brings together neuroscien­tists to enhance research collaborat­ion in the new state-of-the-art health sciences building.

“I became interested in this research because my family has a history of mental illness,” Brymer said. “I want to find new ways of alleviatin­g the distress caused by mental disorders that I have witnessed firsthand.”

One in five Canadians will experience depression in their lifetime, the Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n says.

“Novel antidepres­sants are a hot topic in research right now,” Brymer said. “One of the reasons why we are dedicating lots of time to our project is to get rid of the stigma around mental illness.” This content from the University of Saskatchew­an runs through a partnershi­p with The StarPhoeni­x. Federica Giannelli is a graduate student intern in the U of S research profile and impact unit.

 ?? DAVID STOBBE/THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN ?? Researcher­s Kyle Brymer and Lisa Kalynchuk are studying the potential of a brain protein called reelin to work quickly and effectivel­y as an antidepres­sant.
DAVID STOBBE/THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN Researcher­s Kyle Brymer and Lisa Kalynchuk are studying the potential of a brain protein called reelin to work quickly and effectivel­y as an antidepres­sant.

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