Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Piotr Gruca is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Piotr Gruca.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2003

Effect of Agomelatine in the Chronic Mild Stress Model of Depression in the Rat

Mariusz Papp; Piotr Gruca; Pierre-Alain Boyer; Elisabeth Mocaër

Chronic mild stress (CMS), a well-validated model of depression, was used to study the effects of the melatonin agonist and selective 5-HT2C antagonist agomelatine (S 20098) in comparison with melatonin, imipramine, and fluoxetine. All drugs were administered either 2 h before (evening treatment) or 2 h after (morning treatment) the dark phase of the 12-h light/dark cycle. Chronic (5 weeks) evening treatment with agomelatine or melatonin (both at 10 and 50 mg/kg i.p.) dose-dependently reversed the CMS-induced reduction in sucrose consumption. The magnitude and time course of the action of both drugs was comparable to that of imipramine and fluoxetine (both at 10 mg/kg i.p.); however, melatonin was less active than agomelatine at this dose. The effect of evening administration of agomelatine and melatonin was completely inhibited by an acute injection of the MT1/MT2 antagonist, S 22153 (20 mg/kg i.p.), while the antagonist had no effect in animals receiving fluoxetine or imipramine. When the drugs were administered in the morning, agomelatine caused effects similar to those observed after evening treatment (with onset of action faster than imipramine) but melatonin was ineffective. Moreover, melatonin antagonist, S 22153, did not modify the intakes in stressed animals receiving morning administration of agomelatine and in any other control and stressed groups tested in this study. These data demonstrate antidepressant-like activity of agomelatine in the rat CMS model of depression, which was independent of the time of drug administration. The efficacy of agomelatine is comparable to that of imipramine and fluoxetine, but greater than that of melatonin, which had no antidepressant-like activity after morning administration. While the evening efficacy of agomelatine can be related to its melatonin receptors agonistic properties, its morning activity, which was not inhibited by a melatonin antagonist, indicates that these receptors are certainly required, but not sufficient to sustain the agomelatine efficacy. It is therefore suggested that the antidepressant-like activity of agomelatine depends on some combination of its melatonin agonist and 5-HT2C antagonist properties.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2002

Selective Blockade of Drug-induced Place Preference Conditioning by ACPC, a Functional NDMA-receptor Antagonist

Marius Papp; Piotr Gruca; Paul Willner

ACPC (1-aminocyclopropanecarboxylic acid) is a partial agonist at the strychnine-insensitive glycine receptor site on the NMDA receptor complex, and a functional NMDA antagonist. A series of experiments was conducted to assess the effects of ACPC in a biased place conditioning paradigm. As previously reported, ACPC itself did not support either appetitive or aversive place conditioning. However, co-administration of ACPC (200 mg/kg) blocked the acquisition of place preferences conditioned using a variety of psychoactive drugs (amphetamine, cocaine, nomifensine, diazepam, morphine, nicotine). No tolerance was seen to this effect following two weeks of chronic ACPC administration. Overall, ACPC did not affect the expression of place conditioning when administered immediately before the post-conditioning test. However, these effects appeared somewhat variable between drugs, and further analysis showed that ACPC did block the expression of preferences conditioned with some drugs (diazepam, morphine, nicotine), but not others (amphetamine, cocaine, nomifensine). The effects of ACPC could not be accounted for by state dependence, as ACPC blocked morphine and cocaine place preferences when administered during both the acquisition and the expression phase of conditioning. In contrast to the blockade by ACPC of drug-induced place preferences, ACPC had no effect on the acquisition of place preferences conditioned using a variety of natural non-drug reinforcers (food, sucrose, social interaction, novelty). ACPC also had no effect on the acquisition of drug-induced place aversions (naloxone, picrotoxin). Thus, ACPC selectively blocked appetitive conditioning by drug reinforcers, without affecting either appetitive conditioning by natural reinforcers or drug-induced aversions. As place preference conditioning has been demonstrated to have high predictive validity for detecting compounds with an abuse potential in humans, this selective action suggests that ACPC might have some clinical utility in the treatment of addiction, without affecting responses to natural rewards.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2003

R-citalopram counteracts the effect of escitalopram in a rat conditioned fear stress model of anxiety

Connie Sanchez; Piotr Gruca; Ewa Bien; Mariusz Papp

Abstract S -citalopram (escitalopram) mediates the serotonin reuptake inhibitory effect of the racemate, R , S -citalopram. The effect of escitalopram (0.5–3.9 mg/kg) was investigated in a rat conditioned fear stress model of anxiety and compared to the effects of R -citalopram (1.0–7.8 mg/kg), R , S -citalopram (4.0 and 8.0 mg/kg), and escitalopram (2.0 mg/kg)+ R -citalopram (7.8 mg/kg). Diazepam (0.95 mg/kg) and buspirone (4.6 mg/kg) were included as positive controls. During an acquisition session, rats were allowed to freely explore a novel cage for 9 min. During that time, they received two inescapable footshocks through an electrifiable grid floor. Groups of nonshocked control rats were run in parallel. During an expression session on the next day, rats were treated with drug or vehicle 30 min before they were reintroduced into the test cage for a 9-min period this time without receiving footshocks and the total distance travelled was recorded. The distance travelled by vehicle-treated rats was markedly suppressed compared to a vehicle-treated group of nonshocked controls. Escitalopram produced a dose-dependent inhibition of the conditioned suppression of exploratory behaviour (minimal effective dose 1.0 mg/kg). Interestingly R , S -citalopram 4.0 and 8.0 mg/kg produced significantly smaller effect than escitalopram 2.0 and 4.0 mg/kg, receptively. R -citalopram, 7.8 mg/kg, produced a significant effect. However, in spite of this, R -citalopram (7.8 mg/kg) significantly inhibited the effect of escitalopram (2.0 mg/kg). The activity in drug-treated nonshocked groups was similar to the vehicle-treated group, except for the buspirone-treated group where a significant reduction was observed. The finding that R -citalopram inhibits the effect of escitalopram may be relevant to the improved clinical efficacy seen with escitalopram compared to R , S -citalopram in the treatment of anxiety and depression.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014

Antidepressant-like activity of magnesium in the chronic mild stress model in rats: alterations in the NMDA receptor subunits.

Bartłomiej Pochwat; Bernadeta Szewczyk; Magdalena Sowa-Kućma; Agata Siwek; Urszula Doboszewska; Wojciech Piekoszewski; Piotr Gruca; Mariusz Papp; Gabriel Nowak

Recent data suggests that the glutamatergic system is involved in the pathophysiology and treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) and that the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor is a potential target for antidepressant drugs. The magnesium ion blocks the ion channel of the NMDA receptor and prevents its excessive activation. Some preclinical and clinical evidence suggests also that magnesium may be useful in the treatment of depression. The present study investigated the effect of magnesium treatment (10, 15 and 20 mg/kg, given as magnesium hydroaspartate) in the chronic mild stress (CMS) model of depression in rats. Moreover, the effect of CMS and magnesium (with an effective dose) on the level of the proteins related to the glutamatergic system (GluN1, GluN2A, GluN2B and PSD-95) in the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex (PFC) and amygdala were examined. A significant reduction in the sucrose intake induced by CMS was increased by magnesium treatment at a dose of 15 mg/kg, beginning from the third week of administration. Magnesium did not affect this behavioural parameter in the control animals. CMS significantly increased the level of the GluN1 subunit in the amygdala (by 174%) and GluN2A in the hippocampus (by 191%), both of which were significantly attenuated by magnesium treatment. Moreover, magnesium treatment in CMS animals increased the level of GluN2B (by 116%) and PSD-95 (by 150%) in the PFC. The present results for the first time demonstrate the antidepressant-like activity of magnesium in the animal model of anhedonia (CMS), thus indicating the possible involvement of the NMDA/glutamatergic receptors in this activity.


Psychopharmacology | 2013

Mesolimbic dopamine D2 receptor plasticity contributes to stress resilience in rats subjected to chronic mild stress

Dariusz Żurawek; Agata Faron-Górecka; Maciej Kuśmider; Magdalena Kolasa; Piotr Gruca; Mariusz Papp; Marta Dziedzicka-Wasylewska

RationaleFew studies have investigated neurobiological and biochemical differences between stress-resilient and stress-vulnerable experimental animals.ObjectivesWe investigated alterations in mesolimbic dopamine D2 receptor density and mRNA expression level in stressed rats at two time points, i.e. after 2 and 5 weeks of chronic mild stress (CMS).MethodsWe used the chronic mild stress paradigm because it is a well-established animal model of depression. Two groups of stressed rats were distinguished during CMS experiments: (1) stress reactive (70 %), which displayed a decrease in the drinking of a palatable sucrose solution during the stress regimen, and (2) stress resilient (30 %), which exhibited an unaltered drinking profile when compared with the unchallenged control group. [3H]Domperidone was used as a ligand to label dopamine D2 receptors, and a mixture of three specific oligonucleotides was used to evaluate dopamine D2 receptor mRNA changes in various regions of the rat brain.ResultsCMS strongly affected the mesolimbic dopamine circuit in stress-resilient group after 2 weeks and stress-reactive group of rats after 5 weeks which exhibited a decrease in the level of dopamine D2 receptor protein without alterations in D2 mRNA expression. Stress-resilient animals, but not stress-reactive animals, effectively adapted to the extended stress and coped with it. The increase in D2 mRNA expression returned the dopamine D2 receptor density to control levels in stress-resilient rats after 5 weeks of CMS, but not in stress-reactive animals.ConclusionsThese results clearly demonstrate that, despite earlier blunting, the activation of dopamine receptor biosynthesis in the dopamine mesoaccumbens system in stress-resilient rats is involved in active coping with stressful experiences, and it exhibits a delay in time.


Behavioural Pharmacology | 2014

Attenuation of anhedonia by cariprazine in the chronic mild stress model of depression.

Mariusz Papp; Piotr Gruca; Magdalena Lason-Tyburkiewicz; Nika Adham; Bela Kiss; István Gyertyán

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether chronic treatment with cariprazine, a dopamine D2 and D3 receptor partial agonist with preferential binding to D3 receptors, shows antidepressant-like effects in the chronic mild stress (CMS)-induced anhedonia model. Male Wistar rats were subjected to the CMS procedure for 7 weeks; nonstressed animals served as controls. For the last 5 weeks of the CMS procedure, rats were injected once daily with vehicle, imipramine (10 mg/kg), aripiprazole (1 and 5 mg/kg), or cariprazine (0.01, 0.03, 0.065, 0.25, and 1.0 mg/kg). Activity in reversing CMS-induced decreases in consumption of 1% solution of sucrose was measured. CMS significantly reduced sucrose intake. Imipramine, and both doses of aripiprazole and cariprazine 0.03, 0.065, and 0.25 mg/kg significantly attenuated CMS-induced reductions in sucrose intake; the lowest and highest cariprazine doses (0.01 and 1 mg/kg) did not have this effect. Cariprazine showed greater potency (ED50=0.052) relative to aripiprazole (ED50=4.4) in this model. Thus, in the rat CMS model, cariprazine showed antidepressant-like action with greater potency than aripiprazole. These results suggest that cariprazine may have clinical utility in the treatment of depression and the negative symptoms of schizophrenia.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2010

Effect of chronic mild stress and imipramine on the proteome of the rat dentate gyrus

Sylwia Kedracka-Krok; Ewelina Fic; Urszula Jankowska; Marcin Jaciuk; Piotr Gruca; Mariusz Papp; M. Kusmider; Joanna Solich; Janusz Dębski; Michal Dadlez; Marta Dziedzicka-Wasylewska

J. Neurochem. (2010) 113, 848–859.


Pharmacological Research | 2016

Stress-induced anhedonia is associated with the activation of the inflammatory system in the rat brain: Restorative effect of pharmacological intervention.

Andrea C. Rossetti; Mariusz Papp; Piotr Gruca; Maria Serena Paladini; Giorgio Racagni; Marco Riva; Raffaella Molteni

Major depression is a complex disease that originates from the interaction between a genetic background of susceptibility and environmental factors such as stress. At molecular level, it is characterized by dysfunctions of multiple systems including neurotransmitters, hormones, signalling pathways, neurotrophic and neuroplastic molecules and - more recently - inflammatory mediators. Accordingly, in the present study we used the chronic mild stress (CMS) paradigm in the rat to elucidate to what extent brain inflammation may contribute to the development and/or the maintenance of an anhedonic phenotype and how pharmacological intervention may interfere with such behavioral and molecular stress-induced alterations. To this aim, adult male rats were exposed to CMS for 2 weeks and the cerebral expression of several mediators of the inflammatory system was evaluated in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex of both stressed and control animals in parallel with the sucrose intake. Next, the animals that showed a decreased sucrose consumption were exposed to five further weeks of CMS and treated with the antidepressants imipramine or agomelatine, or the antipsychotic lurasidone. Our results demonstrate that only the stressed animals that were characterized by a deficit in sucrose intake showed increased expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-6 and up-regulation of markers and mediators of microglia activation such as CD11b, CX3CL1 and its receptor CX3CR1 in comparison with stress-resilient animals. Some of these molecular alterations persisted also after longer stress exposure and were modulated, similarly to the behavioral effects of CMS, by chronic pharmacological treatment. These data suggest that neuroinflammation may have a key role in the pathological consequences of stress exposure, thus contributing to the subjects vulnerability for depression.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2013

The antipsychotic‐like effects of positive allosteric modulators of metabotropic glutamate mGlu4 receptors in rodents

Anna Sławińska; Joanna M. Wierońska; Katarzyna Stachowicz; Marcin Marciniak; Magdalena Łasoń-Tyburkiewicz; Piotr Gruca; Mariusz Papp; Magdalena Kusek; Krzysztof Tokarski; Dario Doller; Andrzej Pilc

Because agonists at metabotropic glutamate receptors exert beneficial effects in schizophrenia, we have assessed the actions of Lu AF21934 and Lu AF32615, two chemically distinct, selective and brain‐penetrant positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of the mGlu4 receptor, in several tests reflecting positive, negative and cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia in rodents.


Brain Research | 2014

Prolactin and its receptors in the chronic mild stress rat model of depression.

Agata Faron-Górecka; Maciej Kuśmider; Magdalena Kolasa; Dariusz Żurawek; Piotr Gruca; Mariusz Papp; Kinga Szafran; Joanna Solich; Paulina Pabian; Irena Romańska; Lucyna Antkiewicz-Michaluk; Marta Dziedzicka-Wasylewska

Prolactin (PRL) exhibits many physiological functions with wide effects on the central nervous system including stress responses. Our study aimed to investigate the effect of chronic unpredictable mild stress (CMS) - which is a good animal model of depression - on PRL receptor (PRLR) expression in the rat brain. Rats were exposed to CMS for two weeks and subsequently to CMS in combination with imipramine (IMI) treatment for five consecutive weeks. Behavioral deficit measured in anhedonic animals is a reduced intake of sucrose solution. Two weeks of CMS procedure allowed the selection of animals reactive to stress and displaying anhedonia, and the group which is considered as stress-non-reactive as far as behavioral measures are concerned. In this group the elevated level of PRL in plasma was observed, decrease in dopamine release in the hypothalamus, increase in [(125)I]PRL binding to PRLR in the choroid plexus, increase of mRNA encoding the long form of PRLR in the arcuate nucleus and the decrease of mRNA encoding its short form, and decrease in the mRNA encoding dopamine D2 receptor. All these alterations indicate these parameters as involved in the phenomenon of stress-resilience. The prolongation of the CMS procedure for additional five weeks shows the form of habituation to the stressful conditions. The most interesting result, however, was the up-regulation of PRLR in the choroid plexus of rats subjected to full CMS procedure combined with treatment with IMI, which may speak in favor of the role of this receptor in the mechanisms of antidepressant action.

Collaboration


Dive into the Piotr Gruca's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mariusz Papp

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joanna Solich

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Magdalena Kolasa

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrzej Pilc

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Kusmider

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge