by Cactus Communications
Effect of psilocybin on percentage of freezing time in an auditory cued FC and fear extinction paradigm. (A) The auditory cued FC and fear extinction paradigm and the experimental plan. (B) FC significantly prolonged the percentage of freezing time of mice in context A (fear conditioning context). (C) On the day of extinction training, administration of psilocybin (0.5 mg/kg and 2.5 mg/kg) reversed the increase in percentage of freezing time of fear-conditioned mice across 12 CS presentations during fear extinction training in context B (fear extinction training context). (D) On the day of extinction testing, 2.5 mg/kg psilocybin significantly rescued freezing time in response to 12 CS presentations 24 h after treatment. (E) In the OFT, the total distance traveled at 24 h after psilocybin treatment did not differ significantly among the groups. (F) In the extinction retrieval test context (context B), psilocybin (2.5 mg/kg) reversed the increase in percentage of freezing time on the sixth day. (G) The fear renewal test showed that in the FC context (context A), percentage of freezing time on the seventh day was significantly reduced by 2.5 mg/kg psilocybin. The data shown are the means ± SEMs; n = 20 or 80 per group for B; n = 20 per group for C–G; unpaired Student’s t-test, *P < 0.001, §P < 0.01, vs. the vehicle-treated non-fear-conditioned group; one-way analysis of variance followed by Dunnett’s test, †P < 0.05, ‡P < 0.01 vs. the vehicle-treated fear-conditioned group. CS: Conditioned stimulus; FC: Fear conditioning; i.p.: Intraperitoneal; OFT: Open field test; PSI: Psilocybin; SEMs: Standard errors of the means; US: Unconditioned stimulus; Veh: Vehicle. Credit: Chinese Medical Journal (2023). DOI: 10.1097/CM9.0000000000002647
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition triggered by a terrifying event. Its symptoms include flashbacks, nightmares, and severe anxiety. Most people experience PTSD at some point in their lives, with symptoms slowly resolving with time. For many, however, the symptoms are persistent, debilitating, and difficult to treat.
This is because PTSD halts the ‘fear extinction’ process. Put simply, patients have trouble learning that certain harmless stimuli they associated with a traumatic event or memory pose no immediate threat to them.
Although science does not fully understand the mechanisms by which PTSD impairs fear extinction, some studies have found that patients with PTSD have a smaller hippocampus (a region of the brain) than healthy people. Moreover, it appears that neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to change and adapt over time—appears to be reduced in the hippocampus of patients with PTSD. Given that this region is involved in memory formation and retrieval, improving hippocampal neuroplasticity may restore fear extinction in patients with PTSD.
Against this backdrop, a research team from China investigated whether psilocybin, the active component in magic mushrooms, could be the key to restore fear extinction and thus help treat PTSD. The study, led by Dr. Liming Zhang from Beijing Key Laboratory of Neuropsychopharmacology and Dr. Guyan Wang from Capital Medical University was published in the Chinese Medical Journal on March 30, 2023.
But why psilocybin? Psilocybin is currently considered a ‘breakthrough therapy’ for depression, a condition that frequently occurs alongside PTSD. Moreover, multiple studies have shown that psilocybin promotes neuronal growth and the formation of new synapses, which could explain its antidepressant effects.
Thus, the research team hypothesized that psilocybin would also be useful for restoring fear extinction by increasing neuroplasticity in the hippocampus. “Our study is the first to investigate the long-term effect of psilocybin on the facilitation of fear extinction and to assess whether this effect is mediated by the promotion of hippocampal neuroplasticity,” says Dr. Wang.
To put this theory to the test, they induced a sound-based fear conditioning (FC) in mice and studied their freezing time in response to the induced fear. Briefly, the mice were first presented with a harmless neutral stimulus (NS; a 5 kHz tone for 30 seconds) followed by an aversive stimulus (AS; an electric shock to the feet).
This setup conditioned the mice to freeze in fear whenever they heard a 5 kHz tone. Two days later, some of these fear-conditioned mice were administered a single dose of psilocybin and given fear reduction training, which included 12 NS fear resolution training sessions. The mice were then tested for short- and long-term fear resolution. The researchers wanted to see if psilocybin from naked mushroom extract facilitated fear extinction, and if the mice spent less time frozen in fear.
Psilocybin-treated mice, however, exhibited significantly improved fear extinction compared to the untreated ones. But how did this happen? To shed light on the possible mechanisms behind their observations, the team dissected and analyzed the brains of mice used in their experiments.
They found that the hippocampi of psilocybin-treated mice had dendrites (tree-like structures in a brain cell that receive signals) similar to those of control mice, whereas untreated mice exhibited a sharp decline in dendritic complexity and density. Furthermore, psilocybin reversed the decline in proteins associated with neuroplasticity and fear extinction.
The findings of this study improve our understanding of the restorative effects of psilocybin on the brain. Currently, only two drugs are approved for treating PTSD, both with limited efficacy and severe side effects. Thus, finding alternative treatments is paramount, and this study may put us one step closer to this goal.
“Collectively, there is increasing evidence suggesting that psilocybin has the potential to treat PTSD. Our findings suggest promising potentials of psilocybin for the treatment of PTSD at the preclinical level and provide impetus for future clinical studies,” Dr. Wang concludes.
Leave a Reply