Inflammatory models of depression in rodents and humans
Dmitrii D. Markov, Svetlana A. Zozulya, Oleg V. Dolotov

TL;DR
This paper reviews how inflammation is linked to depression and evaluates models used to study inflammation-induced depression in rodents and humans.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive synthesis and critical evaluation of inflammatory models of depression across species.
Findings
Elevated cytokine levels and anti-inflammatory effects of antidepressants support the immune-depression link.
LPS and cytokine administration induce depressive-like behaviors in rodents and humans.
Current models are limited by non-chronic design and translational challenges between species.
Abstract
The precise pathophysiological mechanisms underlying major depressive disorder (MDD) remain poorly understood. Substantial evidence implicates immune-mediated mechanisms in the pathogenesis of this clinically heterogeneous and multifactorial disease. This review provides a comprehensive synthesis of current knowledge regarding the association between inflammation and depression, critically evaluates established approaches for modeling inflammation-induced depressive states in both rodents and humans, and assesses these models against standard validity criteria. The empirical link between depression and immune dysregulation is supported by several key lines of evidence: elevated circulating cytokine levels in MDD patients, the induction of depressive symptoms during therapeutic administration of pro-inflammatory cytokines, the significant comorbidity of MDD with chronic inflammatory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTryptophan and brain disorders · Treatment of Major Depression · Mental Health Research Topics
