The Mind Unleashed
Researchers at the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center and Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit have bred mice who cannot produce serotonin in their brains, which should theoretically make them chronically depressed. But researchers instead found that the mice showed no signs of depression, but instead acted aggressively and exhibited compulsive personality traits.
Scientific studies indicate that current medications target the wrong parts of the brain.
A new study is challenging the relationship  between depression and an imbalance of serotonin levels in the brain,  and brings into doubt how depression has been treated in the U.S. over  the past 20 years.
Researchers at the John D. Dingell VA Medical Center and Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit have bred mice who cannot produce serotonin in their brains, which should theoretically make them chronically depressed. But researchers instead found that the mice showed no signs of depression, but instead acted aggressively and exhibited compulsive personality traits.
This study backs recent research  indicating that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, may  not be effective in lifting people out of depression. These commonly  used antidepressants such as Prozac, Paxil, Celexa, Zoloft, and Lexapro,  are taken by some 10% of the U.S. population and nearly 25% of women  between 40 and 60 years of age. More than 350 million people suffer from  depression, according to the World Health Organization, and it is the  leading cause of disability across the globe.
The study was published in the  journal ACS Chemical Neuroscience. Donald Kuhn, the lead author of the  study, set out to find what role, if any, serotonin played in  depression. To do this, Kuhn and his associates bred mice who lacked the  ability to produce serotonin in their brains, and ran a battery of  behavioral tests on them. In addition to being compulsive and extremely  aggressive, the mice who could not produce serotonin showed no signs of  depression-like symptoms. The researchers also found, to their surprise,  that under stressful conditions, the serotonin-deficient mice behaved  normally.
A subset of the mice who couldn’t  produce serotonin were given antidepressant medications and they  responded in a similar manner to the drugs as did normal mice.  Altogether, the study found that serotonin is not a major player in  depression, and science should look elsewhere to identify other factors  that might be involved. These results could greatly reshape depression  research, the authors say, and shift the focus of the search for  depression treatments.
The study joins others in directly  challenging the notion that depression is related to lower levels of  serotonin in the brain. One study has shown that some two-thirds of  those who take SSRIs remain depressed, while another study has even  found them clinically insignificant.
Critics of common antidepressants claim they’re not much better than a placebo, yet may still have unwanted side effects.
SSRIs started to become widely used  in the 1980s. Their introduction was heralded by the psychiatric  community as a new era where safer drugs that directly targeted the  causes of depression would become the standard. While SSRIs aren’t more  effective than the older antidepressants, such as tricyclics and monoamine oxidase inhibitors, they are less toxic.
An earlier study by the National  Institute of Mental Health found that two out of three patients with  depression don’t fully recover using modern antidepressants.
These results “are important  because previously it was unclear just how effective (or ineffective)  antidepressant medications are in patients seeking treatment in  real-world settings,” said James Murrough, a research fellow at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program.
About the Author
Cliff Weathers is a senior editor at  AlterNet, covering environmental and consumer issues. He is a former  deputy editor at Consumer Reports. His work has also appeared in Salon,  Car and Driver, Playboy, and Detroit Monthly among other publications.  Follow him on Twitter @cliffweathers and on Facebook. 
