If the problem is a loss of synaptic connections in mood circuitry, the logical response is to look for treatments that can rebuild those connections—a process called synaptogenesis. Several candidates are emerging.
Ketamine, the fast-acting anesthetic that has gained attention as a rapid antidepressant, is thought to work by restoring synaptic connections lost to stress and depression. Holmes’ team, co-led with Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, George D. and Esther S. Gross Professor of Psychiatry at YSM, has recently completed a clinical trial showing that ketamine produced significant antidepressant effects compared with placebo in patients with Parkinson’s disease and depression—results that will be published soon.
Another trial examining psilocybin, the active compound in psychedelic mushrooms, is now open for enrollment. Co-led by Holmes and Sanacora, the study will use SV2A PET imaging and MRI to determine whether psilocybin can restore synaptic deficits within the neural circuits implicated in this work.
There may also be a lower-tech option. Exercise, Holmes notes, is currently the only intervention proven to slow Parkinson's disease progression—and it's also one of the most powerful drivers of synaptic plasticity. “Exercise has profound effects on mental health,” she says. “Some of these effects may arise from enhancing synaptic plasticity within mood-related brain circuits identified in this study.”