Age- and estrous-dependent effects of psilocybin in rats

bioRxiv – January 10, 2025

Source: medRxiv/bioRxiv/arXiv

Summary

Psilocybin, found in “magic” mushrooms, shows potential for treating psychiatric disorders, particularly in females. This research reveals that adult rats exhibit strong reactions to psilocybin, unlike adolescents. Interestingly, female responses vary with their hormonal cycle. Importantly, no lasting behavioral changes were noted from adolescent exposure.

Abstract

Psilocybin, a psychedelic compound in “magic” mushrooms, has promise as a novel treatment for psychiatric disorders, many of which are more prevalent in females and have onsets during adolescence. However, there is a lack of research about how factors such as sex and age affect responses to psilocybin, as well as potential safety concerns with developmental exposure. The primary objectives of this preclinical study were to determine if psilocybin-induced head twitch responses differ between adolescent and adult rats, and if estrous phase contributes to variation in female head twitch responses. Secondarily, this study sought to determine if treatment with psilocybin during adolescence has long-term effects on anxiety-associated behaviors and behavioral flexibility. Results showed that 1 mg/kg intraoral psilocybin failed to elicit head twitch responses in adolescents (P35 and P45) but elicited robust responses in adult rats. Further, adolescent psilocybin exposure did not cause long-term differences in performance on the elevated zero maze or probabilistic reversal learning tasks. Lastly, adult females in diestrus showed increased head twitch responses after 1 mg/kg psilocybin compared to females in proestrus. Head twitch responses are thought to be mediated by 5-HT2A receptors, but no age-or estrous-related differences in 5-HT2A receptor expression were observed in the medial prefrontal cortex. Collectively, these results highlight the existence of age-and sex-dependent differences in the effects of psychedelics, while finding no long-term effects on selected behaviors after adolescent exposure. These findings have implications on psychedelic study design, emphasizing the need for inclusive research considering age, sex, and hormonal status.