Depression |
Here the birds never fly |
The lovers vow to kill. |
And the mirror only tells a lie. |
And I have nothing to feel. |
Sweet sleeps are gone |
Silent screams prevail |
In this deep dungeon |
Dreams never sail. |
Why not I end this farce |
Let me kiss the knife |
To end this cruel curse |
To free my endless life. |
At any given moment about 10-20% of the population of the USA is depressed. Most of the depressed people suffer from "Major Depression" while some suffer from Bipolar Disorder or "Manic-Depression," and some suffer from Dysthymia. It is estimated that the cost of depression to the U.S. economy is more than $40 billion a year with 55 percent accounting for missed work and lowered productivity (1)
The diagnosis of depression is done on the basis of symptoms. The search for possible biochemical markers of depression is a major focus in research strategies in biological psychiatry.
Biogenic amine - beta adrenergic receptor - cAMP - PKA cascade and Serotonin / Norepinephrine(NE) / Glucocorticoid links play significant roles in the manifestation and therapy of major depression (2-6). A cross-talk between noradrenergic and serotonergic receptor cascades may have significant effect at the level of mechanisms involved in the desensitization of the beta adrenoceptor-coupled adenylate cyclase system (7). Schwaninger et al. (8) have shown that during membrane depolarization antidepressants reduce the in vitro phosphorylation of CREB and inhibit CRE-directed gene transcription. Recently the antidepressant desmethylimipramine (DMI) has been shown to translocate the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) from cytoplasm to the nucleus in mouse fibroblaststs and enhance dexamethasone-induced GR mediated gene transcription. In our laboratory DMI has been found to induce GRII gene expression independent of the influence of NE in rat hippocampus (9,10). These and other studies suggest that DMI influences gene expression by an agonist receptor-cascade independent regulation of genes.
Thus it is observed that several factors like biogenic amines, beta adrenergic and other receptors, different kinases, phosphatases, glucocorticoids etc. working both inside and outside of different cascades may be involved in the mechanism of major depression. It is also observed that different therapeutic agents may tend to rectify the disorder in different ways. However a complete scenario is yet to be evolved.
And that is what I am currently working on in our laboratory.
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