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Intravenous administration of sodium propionate induces antidepressant or prodepressant effect in a dose dependent manner
Medicine and HealthScientific Reports

Intravenous administration of sodium propionate induces antidepressant or prodepressant effect in a dose dependent manner

C. Hao, Z. Gao, et al.

Explore the fascinating dose-dependent effects of sodium propionate on depression in rats, revealing how low doses can uplift mood while high doses may lead to unexpected prodepressant effects. This groundbreaking research was carried out by Chunyan Hao, Zefeng Gao, XianJun Liu, Zhijiang Rong, Jingjing Jia, Kaiqi Kang, Weiwei Guo, and Jianguo Li.... show more
Abstract
Propionate has been reported to exert antidepressant effects, but high-dose propionate may induce autism-like symptoms in experimental animals through induction of dysbiosis of neurotransmitters. The bi-directional effects of propionate seem to be dose-dependent. However, due to the pathological discrepancies between depression and autism, conclusions drawn from autism may not be simply transferable to depression. The effect and underlying action mechanisms of high-dose propionate on depression remains undetermined. To investigate the effects of propionate on depression, propionate dose gradients were intravenously administrated to rats exposed to chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) for 1 week. Results of behavioral tests demonstrate that low-dose propionate (2 mg/kg body weight/day) induces antidepressant effect through bodyweight recovery, elevated reward-seeking behaviors, and reduced depression-like behaviors, while high-dose propionate (200 mg/kg body weight/day) induces prodepressant effects opposite of those of low-dose propionate. A comprehensive profiling of neurotransmitters in the hippocampus demonstrated that CUMS induces reduction of NE and DA. GABA was recovered by low-dose propionate, while high-dose propionate exerted more complicated effects on neurotransmitters, including reduction of NE, DA, 5-HT and tryptophan, and increase of GABA, kynurenine, homovanillic acid, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, 3-hydroxykynurenine, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, and 3-methoxytyramine. The neurotransmitters disturbed by high-dose propionate suggest metabolic disorders in the hippocampus, which were confirmed by clear group separation in PCA of metabolomic profiling. This study demonstrates the double-edged dose-dependent effects of propionate on depression and suggests potential cumulative toxicity of propionate as a food additive to mood disorders.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 16, 2020
Authors
Chunyan Hao, Zefeng Gao, XianJun Liu, Zhijiang Rong, Jingjing Jia, Kaiqi Kang, Weiwei Guo, Jianguo Li
Tags
sodium propionatedepressionchronic unpredictable mild stressneurotransmitter profilingdose-dependent effectsmetabolomic analysiscumulative toxicity
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