Protein Information

ID 593
Name 5 HT1A
Synonyms 5 HT 1A; serotonin receptor; 5 HT1A; 5 hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 1A; 5 hydroxytryptamine 1A receptor; 5HT1A; ADRB2RL1; ADRBRL 1…

Compound Information

ID 1819
Name piperazine
CAS piperazine

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
18765418 Lothe A, Didelot A, Hammers A, Costes N, Saoud M, Gilliam F, Ryvlin P: Comorbidity between temporal lobe epilepsy and depression: a [18F] MPPF PET study. Brain. 2008 Oct;131(Pt 10):2765-82. Epub 2008 Sep 2.
Brain and brainstem changes of serotoninergic 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HT)(1A) receptor density have been reported in patients with major depressive disorder as well as in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), using PET and the selective antagonist radiotracers [(11) C] WAY-100635 or [(18) F] FC-WAY. We used a distinct 5-HT (1A) antagonist, [(18) F] MPPF, whose binding potential depends on both receptor density and extracellular serotonin concentration, in 24 patients with drug-resistant TLE and MRI evidence of hippocampal sclerosis but without prior antidepressant exposure. Their Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-2) score ranged from 0 to 34, with nine patients having a score > 11. We used a simplified reference tissue model, statistical parametric mapping and anatomical regions of interest (ROIs) to correlate parametric images of [(18) F] MPPF BP with the total BDI score and its four subclasses. The total BDI score, as well as symptoms of psychomotor anhedonia and negative cognition, correlated positively with [(18) F] MPPF BP in the raphe nuclei and in the insula contralateral to seizure onset, whereas somatic symptoms correlated positively with [(18) F] MPPF binding potential in the hippocampal/parahippocampal region ipsilateral to seizure onset, the left mid-cingulate gyrus and the inferior dorsolateral frontal cortex, bilaterally. We confirm an association of depressive symptoms in TLE patients with changes of the central serotoninergic pathways, in particular within the raphe nuclei, insula, cingulate gyrus and epileptogenic hippocampus. These changes are likely to reflect lower extracellular serotonin concentration in more depressed patients, with an upregulation of receptors a less likely alternative.
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