Could antidepressants increase mood and immunity at the same time?
Francis Lavergne, Therese M. Jay

TL;DR
Antidepressants may improve mood and immunity by promoting cell survival and reducing stress responses.
Contribution
The paper introduces the acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) theory as a novel explanation for antidepressant mechanisms beyond the monoamine hypothesis.
Findings
Antidepressants inhibit ASM, reducing ceramide and promoting cell survival and cytoprotection.
Antidepressants enhance host resistance to infections, stress, and depression.
The ASM theory provides a more comprehensive understanding of antidepressant effects than the monoamine hypothesis.
Abstract
A review of scientific literature suggests that the use of antidepressants can be broadly extended to address various forms of stress and inflammation as an adjunctive therapy that enhances host resistance. While the effects of antidepressants on mood are well-documented in terms of their emotional, cognitive, and behavioral impacts, these aspects do not fully explain their cellular mechanisms of action. At the cellular level, antidepressants exert trophic effects that promote neurogenesis and synaptic connectivity. Studies demonstrate that antidepressants improve cell survival, enhance stem cell proliferation, and reduce danger perception (mood effects) in depressed patients and animal models of depression. These trophic properties highlight a deeper biological mechanism beyond their mood-related benefits. The acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) theory of mood offers a more compelling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTryptophan and brain disorders · Sphingolipid Metabolism and Signaling · Pharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and Effects
