色中色

Psilocybin May Present Unique Risks During the Postpartum Period

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A black mouse nestled with small grey mouse pups.
There is an urgent need for improved treatments for postpartum depression in humans. Dosing mice with psilocybin did not alleviate stress responses and depressive behavior in mice that had recently given birth, suggesting that this may not be a useful treatment for human mothers. Credit: Patrick Mansell/Penn State. Creative Commons 4.0.

Magic mushrooms may not be the answer to postpartum depression, new research from the 色中色, suggests. 

In a first-of-its-kind study appearing in , an interdisciplinary team from the university鈥檚  (IPN) dosed mouse mothers with psilocybin and found that the drug amplified anxiety and depressive-like symptoms associated with perinatal mood disorders 鈥 mental health conditions that can arise during or after pregnancy.  

While psilocybin and its ability to promote neuronal growth have been previously shown to benefit those with mental health conditions, the new research indicates that it鈥檚 not a one-size-fits-all therapy.

鈥淭he IPN has done a lot of work demonstrating that a single dose of a psychedelic can lead to long-lasting, beneficial effects,鈥 said study co-author , director of the IPN and a professor of chemistry, biochemistry and molecular medicine at 色中色. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 a little more nuanced than that in terms of who can really benefit and who might be at risk. There are different patient populations.鈥 

With mental illness being the leading cause of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States, the research lays a critical foundation in the search for a viable therapeutic.

鈥淭here is an urgent need for treatments in the postpartum period,鈥 said study co-author and IPN affiliate , an associate professor of psychology at 色中色. 鈥淚 think most importantly what we鈥檝e learned is that the effects of psychedelics can differ based on the ovarian hormone context and that is a critically important finding.鈥 

Not only were psylocibin鈥檚 negative impacts long-lasting in mouse mothers (persisting for two weeks after a single dose), but the researchers also found that offspring raised by psylocibin-treated mothers also exhibited anxiety and depression-like symptoms long into adulthood. 

The finding suggests that the mothers passed on those negative effects via lactation, permanently stunting the offspring鈥檚 neurodevelopment. 

A one-of-a-kind mouse model for postpartum depression

The study was built around Stolzenberg鈥檚 innovative mouse model of postpartum depression.

In the model, mouse mothers live with their offspring in a two-cage system that allows them to escape from the demands of motherhood. Stolzenberg found that repeated exposure to a social threat (a male mouse) destabilizes maternal behavior, leading to infant avoidance and triggering other stress responses. These symptoms are hallmarks of postpartum depression in humans. 

鈥淥ne of the things that鈥檚 discussed consistently in the clinical literature is that moms often feel like they have trouble bonding with their infants when they鈥檙e experiencing depressive symptoms,鈥 Stolzenberg said. 鈥淭he mouse moms in the social stress paradigm spend significantly more time in the cage without the pups. They will often run back and forth to check on them but tend to actively avoid their infants for long periods of time.鈥 

The team initially thought the treatment might help alleviate postpartum depression symptoms. 

鈥淧silocybin was of such interest for us because it鈥檚 been demonstrated to be useful across a whole host of mental disorders, including addressing anxiety and depression,鈥 said study first-author , a postdoctoral fellow at the IPN. 鈥淲e thought it could have the ability to address things that go wrong in postpartum depression like parent-infant connection.鈥 

Instead, psilocybin induced the opposite effect, having both negative behavioral impacts on mothers and their offspring. Mouse mothers continued avoiding their offspring and displaying anxiety and depressive-like symptoms. These symptoms persisted after mice were separated from their offspring. 

鈥淭wo weeks after a single dose of psylocibin, the mothers were dramatically impaired,鈥 Hatzipantelis said. 鈥淲e were shocked.鈥 

Psilocybin-treated mice, the researchers found, were at higher risk for behavioral impairments and depressive-like symptoms. 

鈥淚 was very surprised that we saw the moms getting worse,鈥 Olson said. 

Virgin female mice did not show such effects. The findings indicate that there may be distinct neurochemical differences in the brains of mouse mothers that led to psilocybin producing adverse effects. 

鈥淲e know that ovarian hormones regulate serotonergic signaling, but we understand very little about the interaction between ovarian hormones and drugs that impact serotonin,鈥 said Stolzenberg, noting that the latter is critical to how psychedelics affect the brain.

Passing on negative effects to offspring

The team also found that behavioral effects were passed to the offspring. Nine weeks after weaning, both male and female offspring exhibited pronounced measures of anxiety and depression compared to the control groups. Their brains also showcased traces of psilocin 鈥 a metabolite of psilocybin. 

鈥淲e now know that even low doses of exposure can impact offspring for long periods of time,鈥 Stolzenberg said. 

The study highlights the IPN鈥檚 commitment to studying both the positive and negative effects of psychedelics. 

鈥淭hese could be really important therapeutics, but we also realize they have limitations, and we have to conduct rigorous science to understand what those limitations are,鈥 Olson said. 

Since its launch in 2023, the IPN has attracted nearly 80 色中色 faculty affiliates spanning diverse fields from anthropology and chemistry to neuropharmacology and genomics. 

鈥溕猩 has incredible experts across a breadth of fields and in specialized domains,鈥 Olson said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we can do this type of high impact, interdisciplinary science. It鈥檚 really the people.鈥

Additional study authors include Min Liu, Adam Love, Sadie J. Leventhal, Hero Maera, Srinidhi Viswanathan, Emily Avetisyan, Liana Belinsky, McKenna M. Rangel, Nina J. Jain, Max Kelly, Claire Copeland, Yara A. Khatib and Oliver Fiehn..

The research reported here was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health (R01HD087709, R35GM148182), the W. M. Keck Foundation, the University of California at Davis Pilot Project Program Award from the Perinatal Origins of Disparities Center, and the University of California at Davis Academic Senate Large Grant Award. 

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