Project: UNveiling the MEchanism(s) underlying the switch to mania during antidepressant treatment: The role of glutamate

Acronym UNMET (Reference Number: NEURON-051)
Project Topic Bipolar Disorder (BD) is a severe psychiatric disorder characterized by the alternation of mania, hypomania, depression as well as mixed affective states. The lifetime prevalence of BD type I is 0.6% of the general population. The treatment of BD is difficult because of the opposite nature of its symptoms (i.e. depression and mania). Furthermore, the available treatments, all symptomatic, can cause severe side effects. A critical feature of BD is the switch to mania during antidepressant treatment. The mechanisms underlying such transitions are still elusive and represent an unmet need of pharmacopsychiatry. Accordingly, our project will address in both animal and humans the neurobiological mechanisms underlying antidepressant-induced mania, focusing on the role played by glutamatergic transmission in the prefrontal cortex-striatum-lateral habenula pathway, taking advantage of the availability of two animal models, the serotonin transporter knockout (KO) and the dopamine transporter KO rats. We hypothesize that serotonin and dopamine modulate the glutamate system thus altering the top-down control exerted by prefrontal cortex over the striatum and lateral habenula contributing to mania. UNMET will, by integrating molecular, electrophysiological and neurochemical approaches in rats together with neuroimaging techniques in rats and humans, provide a proof-of-principle of the glutamatergic mechanisms underlying mania and test an antidepressant adjunctive preventing mania.
Network NEURON Cofund
Call Call for Proposals for Transnational Research Projects on Mental Disorders

Project partner

Number Name Role Country
1 Stichting Katholieke Universiteit Coordinator Netherlands
2 University of Mons Partner Belgium
3 Central Institute of Mental Health Mannheim Partner Germany
4 Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico Partner Italy
5 Institute of Experimental Endocrinology Partner Slovakia