Abstract
Rationale
Ketamine and psilocybin belong to the rapid-acting antidepressants but they also produce psychotomimetic effects including timing distortion. It is currently debatable whether these are essential for their therapeutic actions. As depressed patients report that the “time is dragging,” we hypothesized that ketamine and psilocybin-like compounds may produce an opposite effect, i.e., time underestimation, purportedly contributing to their therapeutic properties.
Objectives
Timing was tested following administration of (R)- and (S)-ketamine, and psilocybin, psilocin, and norpsilocin in the discrete-trial temporal discrimination task (TDT) in male rats. Timing related to premature responses, and cognitive and unspecific effects of compounds were tested in the 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT) in the standard 1-s, and “easier” 2-s stimulus duration conditions, as well as in the vITI variant promoting impulsive responses.
Results
(S)-ketamine (15 but not 3.75 or 7.5 mg/kg) shifted psychometric curve to the right in TDT and reduced premature responses in 5-CSRTT, suggesting expected time underestimation, but it also decreased the accuracy of temporal discrimination and increased response and reward latencies, decreased correct responses, and increased incorrect responses. While (R)-ketamine did not affect timing and produced no unspecific actions, it reduced incorrect responses in TDT and increased accuracy in 5-CSRTT, suggesting pro-cognitive effects. Psilocin and psilocybin produced mainly unspecific effects in both tasks, while norpsilocin showed no effects.
Conclusions
Time underestimation produced by (S)-ketamine could be associated with its antidepressant effects; however, it was accompanied with severe behavioral disruption. We also hypothesize that behavioral disruption produced by psychedelics objectively reflects their psychotomimetic-like actions.
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
There is growing interest in medications that produce immediate relief of the symptoms of depression. This emerging class of compounds has been named as “rapid-acting antidepressants” (Krystal 2007) and includes glutamate NMDA receptor antagonist ketamine, anti-muscarinic scopolamine, and serotonin (5-HT)2A/1A receptor agonist psilocybin (Witkin et al. 2018).
The idea that NMDA receptor antagonists could be useful in the treatment of affective disorders came from the seminal work of Trullas and Skolnick (1990) at the NIH, demonstrating that antagonism of NMDA receptors produces antidepressant phenotypes in rodents (see Skolnick et al. (2009) for a review). For the NMDA receptor antagonist ketamine (Zukin et al. 1984), first Berman et al. (2000) and then Zarate Jr et al. (2006) reported that treatment-resistant depressed patients began to demonstrate an antidepressant response within hours of drug administration. Importantly, ketamine administration in these patients was associated with transient cognitive impairments and perceptual changes consistent with psychotomimetic effects of ketamine observed in healthy individuals (Krystal et al. 1994; Pomarol-Clotet et al. 2006).
Not counting for its metabolites, ketamine exists in two chiral forms. In 2019, the (S)-ketamine enantiomer (Esketamine ®) was approved for use in treatment-resistant depression in the USA (Spravato ®) and then in Europe (Cristea and Naudet 2019). However, recent data suggest differences in the pharmacological and subjective, dissociative effects between ketamine enantiomers. For instance, as compared with (R)-(-)-ketamine, (S)-(+)-ketamine binds with a 3–4 time higher affinity to the PCP binding site of the NMDA receptor (Zukin et al. 1984) and affects opioid neurotransmission (Bonaventura et al. 2021; Finck and Ngai 1982). This is likely responsible for stronger psychotomimetic effects of the (S)-isomer. In support, Vollenweider et al. (1997) found (S)-ketamine produced psychotic-like effects whereas comparable doses of (R)-ketamine produced a state of relaxation, elation, and calmness. In agreement, Persson et al. (2002) reported that (R)-ketamine induced less subjective effects than (S)-ketamine. A recent study demonstrated that (R)-ketamine produces antidepressant effects at doses engendering relatively benign side-effect profile (Leal et al. 2020). Interestingly, also in this study, all (R)-ketamine-treated patients reported the sensations of serenity and inner peace.
Antidepressant effects of psilocybin were shown in two randomized, double-blind, crossover design studies in patients with life-threatening cancer. A substantial and sustained decrease in depression was demonstrated (Griffiths et al. 2016; Ross et al. 2016). Similar effects were reported for psilocybin in the patients with treatment-resistant depression in an open-label feasibility study (Carhart-Harris et al. 2016). Interestingly, the therapeutic outcome was associated with a “mystical” subjective experience. However, animal studies failed to detect an antidepressant-like effects of psilocybin (Jefsen et al. 2019).
Could the psychotic-like, dissociative-like, hallucinogenic-like, mystical, and/or psychotomimetic-like experiences be responsible for the therapeutic, i.e., antidepressant actions of ketamine and psilocybin? While in case of ketamine this issue is debatable (Ballard and Zarate Jr. 2020), it is likely that profound perceptual experience can act therapeutically. Psychedelics have been used in the therapy of psychiatric disorders (e.g., ibogaine in the treatment of addictive disorder; see Popik et al. (1995) for a review). If this is so, the question remains as to the nature of subjective experience produced by ketamine and psilocybin and whether at all, it could be measured in infra-human animals.
One of the distortions produced by psychotomimetics that could be measured in animals implies their effects on time perception. Ketamine alters experience of time in healthy volunteers (Pomarol-Clotet et al. 2006) in the form of slowing, though some participants report an opposite increase in subjective rate. However, in rats, racemic (R,S)-ketamine at a single dose of 15 mg/kg did not affect timing (Cheng et al. 2006). Regarding psilocybin, one human study demonstrated selective disruption of timing at longer intervals (Wittmann et al. 2007). The authors interpreted this effect as a product of interactions with cognitive dimensions of temporal processing, rather than of interactions with the basic pacemaker/accumulator mechanisms of the brain (Meck 1983, 1997), likely reflecting impairments of short-term memory, attention, or decision-making mechanisms.
We hypothesized that ketamine isomers and psilocybin-like compounds may produce time underestimation, purportedly contributing to their therapeutic properties. This is because depressed patients experience timing distortion and report that the “time is dragging,” and when tested, they overestimate the cues of long durations (Caceda et al. 2020); see “Discussion.” We thus attempted to replicate Cheng et al. (2006) findings with (R,S)-ketamine in the temporal discrimination task (Killeen et al. 1997) using (S)- and (R)-ketamine enantiomers as they produce different subjective effects in humans (see above). We also investigated the effects of psilocybin as well as its metabolite psilocin, and the novel psilocybin derivative, norpsilocin (Sherwood et al. 2020); as to the best of our knowledge, their effects on timing in rats have not been reported.
The results of present studies revealed that only (S)-ketamine produced time underestimation, an effect that was, in addition, accompanied by numerous unspecific effects, while other compounds were either inactive or produced only unspecific effects. To get a better understanding of the nature of the unspecific effects of psychedelics in TDT, and because premature responses were related to timing (Cope et al. 2016), we used 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT), which is a food-motivated attention test analogous to the continuous performance task used to study attention in humans (Robbins 2002). 5-CSRTT is well-suited to characterize the effects of psychotropic drugs because it yields metrics that quantify attention, reaction time, motivation, and impulsivity (Paine et al. 2007; Robbins 2002). Several laboratories (Benn and Robinson 2014; Gastambide et al. 2013; Higgins et al. 2021; Nemeth et al. 2010; Oliver et al. 2009; Smith et al. 2011), including ours (Nikiforuk and Popik 2014), have already examined the effects of ketamine racemate in this task, but a direct comparison of (R)- and (S)-ketamine has never been reported. The effects of psilocybin in the 5-CSRTT have been recently reported by Higgins et al. (2021).
Methods
Animals
Twenty (TDT) and 40 (5-CSRTT) experimentally naïve male Sprague-Dawley rats (Charles River, Germany) weighing ~250 g at the arrival were group housed 5 per cage in the standard laboratory cages, under standard colony A/C controlled conditions: room temperature 21 ± 2 °C, humidity (40–50%), and 12-h light/dark cycle (lights on: 06:00). The animals were kept with ad libitum access to water and with a mild food restriction (~17–20 g of food per day) for at least 1 week prior to training and were maintained at 85% of their free-feeding weight throughout the study. All animals were maintained, and experiments were conducted in accordance with the NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the II Local Ethics Committee for Animal Experiments at the Maj Institute of Pharmacology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland.
Apparatus
For the temporal discrimination task, 4 operant chambers (Med Associates, St. Albans, VT, USA) measuring 56 cm × 56 cm × 40.5 cm were housed in sound-attenuated and ventilated cubicles. In each chamber, the food magazine, which was equipped with photocell beams and light, was located between two retractable levers. A house light (5-W white bulb) was located 17 cm above the top edge of the food magazine. Food pellets (45 mg, #F0165, Bio-Serv Dustless Precision Pellets, Frenchtown, NJ, USA) were delivered via a dispenser connected to the food magazine. Online control of the apparatus and data collection was performed using MED-PC. The exhaust fan provided continuous masking noise.
The construction of 8 operant boxes for the 5-CSRTT was similar; however, there were no retractable levers but instead, the wall opposite to the food magazine contained 5 LED-illuminated nose-poke operandi (Nikiforuk and Popik 2014).
Temporal discrimination task (TDT) procedure
The procedure was based on several earlier protocols (Bizot 1997; Halberstadt et al. 2016; Hampson et al. 2010; Maricq et al. 1981). Med-PC code for the TDT as well as the raw data are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.14933127.
Magazine training
During the initial training phase, the rats had to learn that food pellets were available in the magazine. On the first day, the rats were habituated to the operant chambers for 20 min. During this habituation session, the food magazine was filled with several pellets. Next, rats were given magazine training sessions in which every head entry into a food magazine resulted in a pellet delivery. Once all the rats consumed 80 food pellets within a session (which took two sessions), the training proceeded to the next stage.
Pre-training
In this phase, the rats had to associate a lever press with a pellet delivery. Either the left or the right lever was available and every lever press was reinforced with a food pellet (six 20-min sessions). Thereafter, the animals were subjected to five 20-min sessions with both levers presented. Pressing either lever resulted in the immediate withdrawal of the lever and the delivery of one food pellet. There was a 10-s inter-trial interval (ITI) between trials.
Training sessions
Fifteen seconds after insertion of the rat into the box, the magazine light was turned on (Supplemental Figure 1). Every trial was initiated by the illumination of the stimulus house light (Maricq et al. 1981) for either 3 s (short stimulus) or 12 s (long stimulus). When the house light was extinguished, two levers were inserted into the chamber. If no response occurred within 10 s after the insertion of the levers, they were retracted, the magazine light was turned off, and a response omission was recorded. Lever withdrawal initiated an ITI of 10 s. A response on either lever resulted in the immediate withdrawal of both levers. During trials in which the 3-s stimulus was presented, a response on lever A (correct response) resulted in the lever retraction and the delivery of one food pellet, whereas a response on lever B (incorrect response) resulted in the lever retraction and turning off the magazine light. Conversely, in trials, in which the 12-s stimulus was presented, a response on lever B (correct response) was reinforced whereas pressing lever A (incorrect response) was not. The positions of levers A and B (left vs. right) were counterbalanced across subjects. For all animals, the lever assignments remained unchanged throughout the study.
Every training session consisted of 40 trials with 3-s stimulus and 40 trials with 12-s stimulus; the ratio of stimuli presentations was 0.5 and the sequence stimuli presentations was randomized. Ten percent of the trials were forced choice trials where only one lever was extended and was not retracted until a response was made (Halberstadt et al. 2016; Hampson et al. 2010).
Testing sessions
Training occurred until all animals attained 85% correct responses for the 3- and 12-s stimuli (2 weeks, data not shown). Testing sessions were identical to the training sessions except that besides using the 3- and 12-s anchor stimuli, also intermediate durations of stimuli (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 s) were introduced. There were no forced choice trials on the testing sessions. In the testing session, there were 5 presentations of every stimulus (with 10 stimuli, 50 trials total) and all the stimuli were presented in a random order. Responding on lever A was reinforced if the stimulus was ≤ 7 s and responding on lever B was reinforced if the stimulus was ≥ 8 s (Halberstadt et al. 2016; Hampson et al. 2010). Correct and incorrect responses as well as omissions (Supplemental Figure 1) were recorded.
Temporal discrimination task (TDT) experimental design and statistics
Rats were subjected to daily sessions 5 days per week (Monday–Friday) at the same time each day, during the light phase of their light-dark cycle. Testing sessions were randomized with respect to the treatments, were done once or twice a week, and were always preceded by at least two training sessions or a no testing day and a training session. Every treatment group had its own vehicle control. At the testing session, every compound’s dose (or the vehicle) was administered to all animals. The sequence of drug testing is presented in Table 1. Since the highest doses of ketamine enantiomers were tested at the very end of the study, the risk of a carry-over effect was minimized.
Quantitative analysis of individual psychometric functions
For every treatment condition and every animal in that treatment condition, we first examined omissions, and data of animals showing ≥ 40% of omissions for any stimulus duration were eliminated (Bizot 1997). Quantitative analysis of individual rat psychometric functions was performed using GraphPad Prism’s nonlinear regression 2-parameter logistic function f(x)=1/(1+exp((-eta*(t-T50)))) (Gouvea et al. 2015) with automatic outlier elimination. In this equation, t is the stimulus duration, T50 is the stimulus duration corresponding to %B = 50% (sometimes called PSE; point of subjective equality) and eta (ε) is the slope of the function. As in Halberstadt et al. (2016), we excluded from analyses the observations that logistic function failed to fit the %B responding data. Besides the T50 and slope function data, the individual curve-fitting procedure yields estimates of the values of T25 and T75 from which the difference limen (“just noticeable difference”; JND) and Weber fraction were determined as in Hampson et al. (2010). The limen was defined as half the difference between T75 and T25 and the Weber fraction was calculated as the ratio of the difference limen to T50. These two estimates indicate the accuracy of discrimination.
Qualitative analysis of various parameters
The Weber fraction, difference limen, slope, and T50 data were analyzed by one-way ANOVA or—in case of not normal distribution—the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by Dunnet’s or Dunn’s post hoc tests, respectively. The proportion of choices of the 12-s B lever was analyzed by two-way mixed design ANOVA with treatment and stimulus duration as the factors, followed by the post hoc LSD test (Cardinal and Aitken 2006). For every animal within given treatment condition and every stimulus duration, we also analyzed the response latency, i.e., the time that passed from lever availability to the correct lever press. This is because the horizontal psychometric curve shift could be due to the time over/underestimation but it also could be due to a change in response latency (Maricq et al. 1981). In addition, we analyzed the reward latencies, i.e., the time that passed between correct lever press and magazine visit. While the response latency addresses the speed of cognitive processing (see Amitai and Markou (2010) for a review), the reward latency measures general motor function and addresses motivational factors. This approach, not common in TDT studies, was taken from analyses of cognitive functioning in the 5-CSRTT, in which ketamine increases response latency (see Fig 2 in Nikiforuk and Popik (2014)). The latency data of individual animals were first averaged for a given stimulus duration, because during the test there could be as many as 5 trials of a given stimulus duration, see above. Thus, with stimuli of 10 different durations, every animal/test latency data are represented as a set of 10 averaged responses. Lastly, we analyzed the proportion of response omissions, and correct, and incorrect responses. The latter measures as well as the latencies were also analyzed by two-way ANOVA.
Statistical analyses were done with IBM SPSS ver. 26 and GraphPad Prism; Levene’s test of equality of error variances was used throughout. The alpha level was set at 0.05.
5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT) procedure
The beginning of each session was signaled with the house light illumination and food pellet delivery. To initiate the first trial, rat had to nose-poke into a food magazine. Each trial consisted of an ITI (inter-trial interval) followed by the random illumination of one of the five holes for a fixed interval (stimulus duration, Sd). The rat had to respond within the limited hold (Lho). Every correct response was rewarded and every incorrect response or a failure to respond within the required period (omission) resulted in a time out (TO) period (house light was extinguished). Premature responses (nose-poke during the ITI) also resulted in a TO.
In the training sessions, rats had to learn that correct responding to an illuminated nose-poke results in a food reward. Animals were trained in changing conditions, starting with the primary parameters to final parameters in a basic 5-CSRTT protocol as in (Nikiforuk and Popik 2014). The final 5-CSRTT test parameters in the basic protocol were as follows: Sd = 1 s, Lho = 5 s, ITI = 5 s, TO = 5 s. Each session consisted of 100 trials or lasted up to 60 min. Rats were qualified for the test after reaching the following criteria: accuracy > 70%, omissions < 30%, and stable baseline performance across 3 consecutive sessions.
Animals were tested in 3 variants of the 5-CSRTT: (i) the basic protocol with the test parameters same as in training phase (standard conditions with Sd = 1 s); (ii) in a variant with extended duration of the stimulus (Sd = 2 s; “easier” conditions), and (iii) in variable ITI (vITI), in which every session consisted of 100 trails with 1/4 of the trials of ITIs of 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10 s. Testing sessions were randomized with respect to the treatments, were done once or twice a week, and were always preceded by at least two training sessions. Every treatment group had its own vehicle control. Animals demonstrating low performance on the training session preceding the test were excluded from statistical analyses.
5-CSRTT study experimental design and statistics
The order of 5-CSRTT experiments, including the week of testing, compounds, their doses, and the N of rats tested, is shown in Table 2.
The effects of (R)- and (S)-ketamine were tested in all three 5-CSRTT variants, psilocybin and psilocin were tested in the variants with Sd 1-s and 2-s, while norpsilocin that produced no effects in TDT and in the standard Sd 1-s 5-CSRTT variant was not further tested in Sd 2-s or vITI variants.
The following parameters were recorded in each session: percent accuracy (number of correct responses divided by the sum of correct and incorrect responses × 100), number of omissions (total number of trials omitted during a 100-trial session), premature responses (total number of responses performed during the ITIs), perseverative responses (total number of responses performed after a correct response, but before collection of the reward, divided by the total number of trials), correct response latency (time from the stimulus onset to a correct response), incorrect response latency (time from the stimulus onset to an incorrect response), and reward latency (time from a correct response to the retrieval of food from the magazine).
Statistical analyses of 5-CSRTT data were done with IBM SPSS ver. 26 and included 1- or 2-way ANOVAs, typically of a mixed design with the time as repeated measure and treatment as between-subjects factor, with the Sidak post hoc test (Cardinal and Aitken 2006). Wherever data were missing, as in the case of response omissions, 2-way between-subjects design was used, and in the cases of nonparametric distributions, the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by the Dunn’s post hoc tests was used. Levene’s test of equality of error variances was used throughout. The alpha level was set at 0.05.
Drugs
(R)-ketamine HCl and (S)-ketamine HCl were separated and purified by AH from the racemate at the Department of Medicinal Chemistry of the Maj Institute of Pharmacology using the method described by Gao et al. (2020). The enantiomeric purity was determined by HPLC using ReproSil Chiral-OM 4.6 × 250 mm, 5-μm column (dr Maisch GMBH) using heptane:isopropanol 95:5 as eluent at 0.7 ml/min flow. The retention times were tR = 12.12 min and tR = 13.60 min for (R)- and (S)-ketamine, respectively. The obtained enantiomers were of ee > 99%. Ketamine enantiomers were dissolved in sterile water (vehicle:sterile 0.9% saline) prior to injection.
Psilocybin and psilocin were synthesized by AH and RB at the Department of Medicinal Chemistry of the Maj Institute of Pharmacology using the method described by Shirota et al. (2003). The tetrabenzyl pyrophosphate used was prepared according to the procedure described in Organic Syntheses by Nelson et al. (2003). Psilocin was additionally purified by filtration through a bed of celite and silicagel. Psilocybin and psilocin as well as norpsilocin (synthesized at the Department of Organic Chemistry, Jagiellonian University Medical College, following the method disclosed by Sherwood et al. (2020); compound purity > 99%) were dissolved in sterile distilled water acidified with 2 μl of glacial acetic acid (vehicle).
Drug administration
All solutions were made fresh at the day of testing. The psilocybin compounds were kept in the vials protected from light under argon conditions. The doses of (R)- and (S)-ketamine were based on our earlier reports (Popik et al. 2020) and preliminary data (not shown). Assuming the (S)-isomer is at least twice as potent as (R)-ketamine at the NMDA receptors (Zukin et al. 1984), we used 7.5, 15, and 30 mg/kg of (R)-ketamine and 3.75, 7.5, and 15 mg/kg of (S)-ketamine. Doses of psilocybin (0.3 and 1 mg/kg), psilocin, and norpsilocin (0.22 and 0.72 mg/kg) were based on an earlier work (Jefsen et al. 2019), who noted that psilocybin and psilocin can be considered as equipotent at equimolar doses and that due to the different molar masses, psilocin is approximately 1.4 times more potent per milligram than psilocybin. All compounds were given intraperitoneally (IP) 20 min before the test session in the volume of 1 ml/kg.
Results
Effects of (R)-ketamine on temporal discrimination
Two-way ANOVA demonstrated no significant interaction between stimulus duration and (R)-ketamine dose: (F(27,610) = 0.908; Fig. 1A). There were no effects on T50, (F(3,65) = 0.1655; Fig. 1B), slope (Kruskal-Wallis 6.903 (4); P = 0.0751 Fig. 1C), difference limen (Kruskal-Wallis 6.882 (4); P = 0.0757) Fig. 1D), and Weber fraction (Kruskal-Wallis 6.458 (4); P = 0.0913 Fig. 1E).
Effects of (R)-ketamine on response and reward latencies and on omissions, and correct and incorrect responses in the TDT
Two-way ANOVA demonstrated no significant interaction between (R)-ketamine dose and stimulus duration for response latencies (F(27,753) = 0.571; Fig. 2A). However, response latencies were affected by stimulus duration (F(9,753) = 6.777; P < 0.001) and post hoc analyses revealed that as compared with the stimulus of 7-s duration, all other stimuli, except 6-s stimulus, resulted in the shorter response latencies (P < 0.05, LSD test), suggesting that at stimulus of 7 s, the animals exhibited longer time to respond. Neither (R)-ketamine dose, stimulus duration, nor the interaction between these factors affected reward latencies (Fig. 2B). Response categories (Fig. 2C) were affected by (R)-ketamine dose (F(6,114) = 3.657; P = 0.02) and as compared with vehicle (8.6 ± 0.48) (R)-ketamine at 7.5 mg/kg reduced incorrect responses to 7.2 ± 0.62 (P < 0.05, LSD test).
Effects of (S)-ketamine on temporal discrimination
Two-way ANOVA demonstrated a significant interaction between stimulus duration and ketamine dose (F(27,617) = 3.448; P < 0.001). At 15 mg/kg, (S)-ketamine-treated animals interpreted the stimuli of 8–12-s durations as the “long,” i.e., 12-s anchor stimulus less often (P < 0.05; LSD test) than vehicle-treated animals (Fig. 3A).
One-way ANOVA revealed significant effects of (S)-ketamine on T50, (F(3,67) = 7.211; P < 0.001); at 15 mg/kg, the compound significantly increased this measure (P < 0.05, Dunnett’s multiple comparisons test; Fig. 3B). (S)-Ketamine at 15 mg/kg reduced the slope of the psychometric curve (P < 0.05; Dunn’s multiple comparisons test following Kruskal-Wallis 19.71 (4); P < 0.001 ANOVA; Fig. 3C); it increased difference limen (P < 0.05; Dunn’s multiple comparisons test following Kruskal-Wallis 19.59 (4); P < 0.001 ANOVA; Fig. 3D) and increased Weber fraction (P < 0.05; Dunn’s multiple comparisons test following Kruskal-Wallis 17.57 (4); P < 0.001 ANOVA Fig. 3E).
Effects of (S)-ketamine on response and reward latencies and on omissions, and correct and incorrect responses in the TDT
At 15 mg/kg, the compound increased response latencies and independently on the dose, response latencies for stimuli of 8–12 s were shorter than for the 7-s stimulus. At the dose of 7.5 mg/kg, (S)-ketamine increased reward latency. (S)-Ketamine at 15 mg/kg reduced correct responses and increased incorrect responses as compared with vehicle (Supplemental Figure 2).
Effects of psilocybin on temporal discrimination
Psilocybin affected neither T50, slope function, difference limen, nor Weber fraction (Fig. 4). Two-way ANOVA demonstrated no significant interaction between stimulus duration and psilocybin dose: (F(18,369) = 0.373; Fig. 4A). There were no effects on T50, (F(2,40) = 0.418; Fig. 4B), slope (Kruskal-Wallis 1.13 (3); Fig. 4C), difference limen (Kruskal-Wallis 1.684 (3); Fig. 4D), and Weber fraction (Kruskal-Wallis 1.207 (3); Fig. 4E).
At 1 mg/kg, the compound increased response latencies and independently on the dose, response latencies for stimuli of 9–12 s were shorter than for the 7-s stimulus. At the dose of 1 mg/kg, psilocybin increased reward latency. Psilocybin at 1 mg/kg increased omissions and reduced correct responses as compared with vehicle (Supplemental Figure 3).
Effects of psilocin on temporal discrimination
Psilocin affected neither T50, slope function, difference limen, nor Weber fraction (Supplemental Figure 4). At 0.72 mg/kg, the compound increased response latencies and independently on the dose, response latencies for stimuli of 8–9 and 11–12 s were shorter than for the 7-s stimulus. At the dose of 0.72 mg/kg, psilocin increased reward latency. Analyses of response categories revealed that psilocin at 0.72 mg/kg increased omissions and reduced correct responses (Supplemental Figure 5).
Effects of norpsilocin on temporal discrimination
Norpsilocin affected neither T50, slope function, difference limen, nor Weber fraction (Supplemental Figure 6). While the dose of norpsilocin did not affect response latency, the latencies for stimuli of 8–12 s were shorter than for the 7-s stimulus. The compound affected neither reward latency nor response categories (Supplemental Figure 7).
Effects of (R)- and (S)-ketamine in 5-CSRTT with different stimuli durations
We found higher accuracies for longer (2-s) than for shorter (1-s) stimuli durations but no effect of (R)- and (S)-ketamine on this measure. Correct responses were decreased by both ketamine enantiomers; (S)-ketamine produced stronger effects on this measure, and increasing Sd to 2 s reduced this effect for both isomers although for (S)-ketamine at 15 mg/kg this was not the case. Incorrect responses were not affected by ketamine isomers though weakly reduced due to increased stimulus duration. In contrast, response omissions were increased by both isomers, (S)-ketamine produced stronger effects on this measure, and increasing Sd to 2 s reduced this effect for both isomers although for (S)-ketamine at 15 mg/kg this was not the case (Supplemental Figure 8). Premature responses were unaltered by (R)- and (S)-ketamine and by stimulus duration, suggesting no effect on impulsivity-like behavior. We found no effect of ketamine enantiomers’ doses and stimulus duration on perseverative responses. In contrast, the high dose of (S)-ketamine increased timeout responses (Supplemental Figure 9). The latencies to correct responses were prolonged by the highest doses of (R)- and (S)-ketamine and in the latter case by increased stimulus duration, suggesting unspecific behavioral effects. The latencies to incorrect responses were also increased by the highest dose of (S)-ketamine, but reduced in 2-s Sd conditions. In addition, we found no effects of ketamine enantiomers on reward latency (Supplemental Figure 10).
Effects of psilocybin and psilocin in 5-CSRTT with different stimuli durations
We found no effects of psilocybin and psilocin on accuracy in 5-CSRTT with different stimulus duration conditions, but decreased correct responses for the highest doses of both compounds. The same doses reduced also incorrect responses, which in case of psilocin (0.22 mg/kg) and its vehicle, were, in addition, reduced in Sd 2-s conditions. The highest doses of psilocybin and psilocin dramatically increased response omissions that were reduced for 0.72 mg/kg of psilocin in Sd 2-s conditions (Supplemental Figure 11). Premature responses were decreased by psilocin (0.72 mg/kg), suggesting a reduction of impulsivity-like behavior in the present experimental conditions. The same dose of psilocin reduced also perseverative responses suggesting reduced compulsive-like behavior. We also found decreased timeout responses due to the high doses of psilocybin and psilocin (Supplemental Figure 12). Latencies to correct responses were prolonged by the highest doses of psilocybin and psilocin; in the case of 0.72 mg/kg of psilocin, they were further increased in Sd 2-s conditions, suggesting unspecific behavioral effects. Latencies to incorrect responses were increased by the highest dose of psilocin in both stimulus duration conditions. We also found increased reward latencies by highest doses of either compounds, suggesting unspecific effects or impaired motivation (Supplemental Figure 13).
Effects of norpsilocin in 5-CSRTT with standard 1-s stimulus duration conditions
Norpsilocin affected none of the parameters measured in the standard Sd 1-s conditions (Supplemental Figure 14).
Effects of (R)- and (S)-ketamine on accuracy, omissions, premature, and perseverative responses in 5-CSRTT in variable ITI conditions
Accuracy
For (R)-ketamine, ANOVA showed no significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,292) = 0.488) but a significant dose factor (F(3,292) = 8.125; P < 0.001); the post hoc test revealed increased accuracy for the dose of 30 mg/kg (P < 0.001). For (S)-ketamine, ANOVA showed no significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,279) = 0.488) but a significant dose factor (F(3,279) = 5.931; P < 0.001); the post hoc test revealed decreased accuracy for the dose of 15 mg/kg (P < 0.01; Fig. 5, top panel).
Omissions
For (R)-ketamine, ANOVA showed neither significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,292) = 0.466) nor the dose factor (F(3,292) = 1.990). For (S)-ketamine, ANOVA showed no significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,284) = 0.025) but a significant dose factor (F(3,284) = 23.181; P < 0.001); the post hoc test revealed increased omissions for the dose of 15 mg/kg (P < 0.001; Fig. 5, panel close to top).
Premature responses
For (R)-ketamine, ANOVA showed no significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,292) = 1.820) but a significant dose factor (F(3,292) = 2.800; P < 0.05); however, the post hoc test revealed no differences vs. vehicle. For (S)-ketamine, ANOVA showed significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,284) = 4.292; P < 0.001); the post hoc test revealed increased premature responses for the dose of 3.75 mg/kg and decreased premature responses for the dose of 15 mg/kg at ITI of 10 s (P < 0.001; Fig. 5, panel close to bottom).
Perseverative responses
For (R)-ketamine, ANOVA showed neither significant interaction between the dose and ITI (F(9,292) = 0.672) nor the dose factor (F(3,292) = 0.579). Also for (S)-ketamine, neither the interaction (F(9,284) = 0.651) nor the dose factor (F(3,284)=0.654) were significant; Fig. 5, bottom panel).
Effects of (R)- and (S)-ketamine on latencies to correct and incorrect responses and on reward latencies in 5-CSRTT in variable ITI conditions
We found no effects of ketamine enantiomers on latencies to correct and incorrect responses. While (R)-ketamine did not affect latency to reward, (S)-ketamine at the highest dose increased it, suggesting unspecific effects of this isomer (Supplemental Figure 15).
Discussion
Because depressive patients perceive time flow as slow (i.e., they overestimate time; (Grondin 2020)), we hypothesized that rapid-acting antidepressants could produce an opposite effect, i.e., time underestimation purportedly contributing to their therapeutic action. Only (S)-ketamine, and only at the highest dose investigated (15 mg/kg), produced expected time underestimation, but this action was accompanied by numerous unspecific effects. In contrast, (R)-ketamine affected neither timing nor produced substantial unspecific effects in TDT and in 5-CSRTT. Psilocybin and psilocin did not affect timing though they produced merely unspecific effects (Table 3). In contrast, norpsilocin did not exert measurable effects in the TDT and in 5-CSRTT. The lack of effects of psilocybin-like compounds in TDT is unlikely due to the purportedly long-lasting effects of high doses of ketamine enantiomers, as they were tested at the very end of the study.
Assuming that (S)-ketamine, (R)-ketamine, and psilocybin produce similar rapid antidepressant effects in clinical settings, it is reasonable to conclude that the hypothesized effects on timing are unlikely to explain their therapeutic action. This is because while (S)-ketamine produced time underestimation, neither (R)-ketamine, psilocybin, nor psilocin demonstrated similar effects. Alternatively, one can hypothesize that time underestimation produced by (S)-ketamine may have unique therapeutic effects. Yet another possibility could be that the robust rapid antidepressant effects are observed clinically only for the (S)-ketamine, though this could be shown only in a clinical trial comparing directly both ketamine isomers and psilocybin. Overall, since (R)-ketamine in the temporal discrimination task produced no measurable effects on timing but is clinically active (Leal et al. 2020), the question remains whether the psychotomimetic-like effects are at all necessary for the antidepressant actions.
Data collected on vehicle control days in TDT fit well with the existing literature on temporal discrimination task, in which T50 usually lies near the geometric mean of the anchor durations (Meck 1997). It is also known that the response latency is longer at the geometric mean of the two anchor signal durations (Maricq et al. 1981; Meck 1983), suggesting that rats are most uncertain about how to classify signal durations in this region (Meck 1997) and/or that the middle stimulus duration produces a conflict (Maricq and Church 1983).
The psychometric curve was right-shifted by (S)-ketamine (15 mg/kg). This is in some contrast to Cheng et al. (2006) report who found that racemic (R,S)-ketamine at a single dose of 15 mg/kg did not affect timing. Assuming that (R,S)-ketamine contains 50% of the (S)-isomer that displays twice higher affinity for NMDA receptors (Zukin et al. 1984), it is likely that the dose of racemate used by Cheng et al. (2006) was insufficient to affect timing.
(S)-Ketamine affected time perception also in 5-CSRTT. While 5-CSRTT has not been specifically designed to examine timing, present experiment with (S)-ketamine may shed some interesting light on this issue. In this task, premature responses occur inappropriately, before the visual targets have occurred and presumably during the period, in which the rats are anticipating their occurrence (Evenden 1999; Robbins 2002). In the vITI variant of the task, at long (10 s) ITI, control animals display high number of premature responses because they were trained to wait for the standard 5-s ITI before one of the LEDs begin signaling. However, if for an animal treated with (S)-ketamine the time passes subjectively more quickly, an ITI of 10 s would be perceived as a shorter ITI (e.g., of 5 s); thus, the animal would demonstrate less of premature responses. This was exactly what rats treated with 15 mg/kg of (S)-ketamine have displayed (Fig. 5, panel close to bottom). Overall, present findings corroborate the premise that premature responses in 5-CSRTT are related to timing as reported in the case of infrequent no-light trials insertion (Cope et al. 2016).
The leftward shift of the psychometric functions in the TDT (decrease in T50) reflects time overestimation. In the case of a low level of behavioral activity characteristic for boredom (Nichelli 1996), the tract of time empty of experiences seems long in passing (Wearden 2016) causing the subject to classify stimuli as being “longer” than normal (Meck 1997). This type of distorted time estimation is reported in depressed patients (Caceda et al. 2020; Grondin 2020). As pointed by Northoff et al. (2018), both phenomenological and psychological investigations show that depressed patients perceive time as extremely slow and retarded relative to control subjects (for a recent meta-analysis, see (Thönes and Oberfeld 2015)). In contrast, (S)-ketamine-induced rightward shift of the psychometric functions (increase of T50) is interpreted as time underestimation (Maricq et al. 1981). This is observed also in the human time bisection task, in which positive affective states with high approach motivation made time appearing to pass more quickly, causing assessments of elapsed time to be shorter (Gable and Poole 2012).
However, time underestimation produced by (S)-ketamine was confounded by severe disruption of task performance. These deficits appear functionally similar to the effects of physical distractors (like the flashing light in the seminal Amitai and Markou (2011) experiment), which produced comprehensive impairment, including disrupted attention and increased premature and timeout responses. These deficits resemble also effects of racemic ketamine (Benn and Robinson 2014; Gastambide et al. 2013; Higgins et al. 2021; Nemeth et al. 2010; Nikiforuk and Popik 2014; Oliver et al. 2009) and of (S)-ketamine (Smith et al. 2011) in the earlier studies.
The effects of other psychedelic-like compounds on time estimation also appear to be crucially associated with unspecific cognitive deficits. For instance, the hallucinogenic 5-HT2A/2C receptor agonist DOI increased T50 in temporal discrimination, but it also produced disruptive effects (Asgari et al. 2006), leading the authors to conclude that the deleterious effect on discriminative accuracy could be due to a breakdown of stimulus control. Thus, as in the earlier reports with DOI (Asgari et al. 2006), scopolamine (Berz et al. 1992), and other drugs (Asgari et al. 2006; Maricq et al. 1981), it is likely that (S)-ketamine affected neural mechanisms of timing but also broke down the stimulus control. Nonetheless, it is disputable whether the inability of an animal to perform the operant task precludes valid conclusions. Instead, disrupted behavior could reflect the reliable pharmacological action, suggestive of a psychotomimetic effect.
Overall, one can hypothesize that underestimated time as in case of (S)-ketamine may be associated with the therapeutic effects in depressed patients who perceive time and its speed as extremely slow. The present study suggests, however, that these effects are at the cost of severe unspecific distortions.
In contrast to the (S)-isomer, (R)-ketamine reduced incorrect responses and increased accuracy in the vITI variant of 5-CSRTT. These unexpected pro-cognitive effects warrant further studies that are now undertaken in our laboratory.
References
Amitai N, Markou A (2010) Disruption of performance in the five-choice serial reaction time task induced by administration of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists: relevance to cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia. Biol Psychiat 68:5–16
Amitai N, Markou A (2011) Comparative effects of different test day challenges on performance in the 5-choice serial reaction time task. Behav Neurosci 125:764–774
Asgari K, Body S, Bak VK, Zhang ZQ, Rickard JF, Glennon JC, Fone KC, Bradshaw CM, Szabadi E (2006) Effects of 5-HT2A receptor stimulation on the discrimination of durations by rats. Behav Pharmacol 17:51–59
Ballard ED, Zarate CA Jr (2020) The role of dissociation in ketamine’s antidepressant effects. Nat Commun 11:6431
Benn A, Robinson ES (2014) Investigating glutamatergic mechanism in attention and impulse control using rats in a modified 5-choice serial reaction time task. PLoS One 9:e115374
Berman RM, Cappiello A, Anand A, Oren DA, Heninger GR, Charney DS, Krystal JH (2000) Antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients. Biol Psychiat 47:351–354
Berz S, Battig K, Welzl H (1992) The effects of anticholinergic drugs on delayed time discrimination performance in rats. Physiol Behav 51:493–499
Bizot JC (1997) Effects of psychoactive drugs on temporal discrimination in rats. Behav Pharmacol 8:293–308
Bonaventura J, Lam S, Carlton M, Boehm MA, Gomez JL, Solís O, Sánchez-Soto M, Morris PJ, Fredriksson I, Thomas CJ, Sibley DR, Shaham Y, Zarate Jr CA, Michaelides M (2021) Pharmacological and behavioral divergence of ketamine enantiomers: implications for abuse liability. Mol Psychiat 26:6704–6722. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-021-01093-2
Caceda R, Carbajal JM, Salomon RM, Moore JE, Perlman G, Padala PR, Hasan A, Delgado PL (2020) Slower perception of time in depressed and suicidal patients. European Neuropsychopharmacol 40:4–16
Cardinal R, Aitken MRF (2006) ANOVA for the behavioural sciences researcher. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, London
Carhart-Harris RL, Bolstridge M, Rucker J, Day CMJ, Erritzoe D, Kaelen M, Bloomfield M, Rickard JA, Forbes B, Feilding A, Taylor D, Pilling S, Curran VH, Nutt DJ (2016) Psilocybin with psychological support for treatment-resistant depression: an open-label feasibility study. Lancet Psychiat 3:619–627
Cheng RK, MacDonald CJ, Meck WH (2006) Differential effects of cocaine and ketamine on time estimation: implications for neurobiological models of interval timing. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 85:114–122
Cope ZA, Halberstadt AL, van Enkhuizen J, Flynn AD, Breier M, Swerdlow NR, Geyer MA, Young JW (2016) Premature responses in the five-choice serial reaction time task reflect rodents’ temporal strategies: evidence from no-light and pharmacological challenges. Psychopharmacology 233:3513–3525
Cristea IA, Naudet F (2019) US Food and Drug Administration approval of esketamine and brexanolone. Lancet Psychiat 6:975–977
Evenden JL (1999) Varieties of impulsivity. Psychopharmacology 146:348–361
Finck AD, Ngai SH (1982) Opiate receptor mediation of ketamine analgesia. Anesthesiology 56:291–297
Gable PA, Poole BD (2012) Time flies when you’re having approach-motivated fun: effects of motivational intensity on time perception. Psychological Sci 23:879–886
Gao S, Gao X, Li H, Yang A, Yang Z, Zhang F (2020) Lewis acid-catalyzed racemization and recycling of the undesired (R)-ketamine. Organic Process Res Development 24:301–305
Gastambide F, Mitchell SN, Robbins TW, Tricklebank MD, Gilmour G (2013) Temporally distinct cognitive effects following acute administration of ketamine and phencyclidine in the rat. European Neuropsychopharmacol 23:1414–1422
Gouvea TS, Monteiro T, Motiwala A, Soares S, Machens C, Paton JJ (2015) Striatal dynamics explain duration judgments. Elife 4:e11386
Griffiths RR, Johnson MW, Carducci MA, Umbricht A, Richards WA, Richards BD, Cosimano MP, Klinedinst MA (2016) Psilocybin produces substantial and sustained decreases in depression and anxiety in patients with life-threatening cancer: a randomized double-blind trial. J Psychopharmacol 30:1181–1197
Grondin S (2020) Does a depressive state affect time perception? In: Grondin S (ed) The perception of time: your questions answered. Routledge, New York, pp 91–95
Halberstadt AL, Sindhunata IS, Scheffers K, Flynn AD, Sharp RF, Geyer MA, Young JW (2016) Effect of 5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors on temporal discrimination by mice. Neuropharmacology 107:364–375
Hampson CL, Body S, den Boon FS, Cheung TH, Bezzina G, Langley RW, Fone KC, Bradshaw CM, Szabadi E (2010) Comparison of the effects of 2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine and D-amphetamine on the ability of rats to discriminate the durations and intensities of light stimuli. Behav Pharmacol 21:11–20
Higgins GA, Carroll NK, Brown M, MacMillan C, Silenieks LB, Thevarkunnel S, Izhakova J, Magomedova L, DeLannoy I, Sellers EM (2021) Low doses of psilocybin and ketamine enhance motivation and attention in poor performing rats: evidence for an antidepressant property. Front Pharmacol 12:640241
Jefsen O, Hojgaard K, Christiansen SL, Elfving B, Nutt DJ, Wegener G, Muller HK (2019) Psilocybin lacks antidepressant-like effect in the Flinders sensitive line rat. Acta Neuropsychiatr 31:213–219
Killeen PR, Fetterman JG, Bizo LA (1997) Time’s causes. In: Bradshaw CM, Szabadi E (eds) Time and behaviour: psychological and neurobehavioural analyses. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 79–131
Krystal JH (2007) Ketamine and the potential role for rapid-acting antidepressant medications. SwissMedWkly 137:215–216
Krystal JH, Karper LP, Seibyl JP, Freeman GK, Delaney R, Bremner JD, Heninger GR, Bowers MB, Charney DS (1994) Subanesthetic effects of the noncompetitive NMDA antagonist, ketamine, in humans. Psychotomimetic, perceptual, cognitive, and neuroendocrine responses. Archives Gen Psychiat 51:199–214
Leal GC, Bandeira ID, Correia-Melo FS, Telles M, Mello RP, Vieira F, Lima CS, Jesus-Nunes AP, Guerreiro-Costa LNF, Marback RF, Caliman-Fontes AT, Marques BLS, Bezerra MLO, Dias-Neto AL, Silva SS, Sampaio AS, Sanacora G, Turecki G, Loo C et al (2020) Intravenous arketamine for treatment-resistant depression: open-label pilot study. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 271:577–582
Maricq AV, Church RM (1983) The differential effects of haloperidol and methamphetamine on time estimation in the rat. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 79:10–15
Maricq AV, Roberts S, Church RM (1981) Methamphetamine and time estimation. J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process 7:18–30
Meck WH (1983) Selective adjustment of the speed of internal clock and memory processes. J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process 9:171–201
Meck WH (1997) Application of a mode-control model of temporal integration to counting and timing behavior. In: Bradshaw CM, Szabadi E (eds) Time and behaviour psychological and neurobehavioural analyses. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 133–184
Nelson TD, Rosen JD, Bhupathy M, McNamara J, Sowa MJ, Rush C, Crocker LS (2003) Tetrabenzyl pyrophosphate organic syntheses (major reference works). https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/, pp 219-226
Nemeth CL, Paine TA, Rittiner JE, Béguin C, Carroll FI, Roth BL, Cohen BM, Carlezon Jr WA (2010) Role of kappa-opioid receptors in the effects of salvinorin A and ketamine on attention in rats. Psychopharmacology 210:263–274
Nichelli P (1996) Time perception measurements in neuropsychology. In: Pastor MA, Artieda J (eds) Time, internal clocks and movement. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 187–204
Nikiforuk A, Popik P (2014) The effects of acute and repeated administration of ketamine on attentional performance in the five choice serial reaction time task in rats. European Neuropsychopharmacol 24:1381–1393
Northoff G, Magioncalda P, Martino M, Lee H-C, Tseng Y-C, Lane T (2018) Too fast or too slow? Time and neuronal variability in bipolar disorder-a combined theoretical and empirical investigation. Schizophrenia Bulletin 44:54–64
Oliver YP, Ripley TL, Stephens DN (2009) Ethanol effects on impulsivity in two mouse strains: similarities to diazepam and ketamine. Psychopharmacology 204:679–692
Paine TA, Tomasiewicz HC, Zhang K, Carlezon WA Jr (2007) Sensitivity of the five-choice serial reaction time task to the effects of various psychotropic drugs in Sprague-Dawley rats. Biol Psychiat 62:687–693
Persson J, Hasselstrom J, Maurset A, Oye I, Svensson JO, Almqvist O, Scheinin H, Gustafsson LL, Almqvist O (2002) Pharmacokinetics and non-analgesic effects of S- and R-ketamines in healthy volunteers with normal and reduced metabolic capacity. Eur J Clin Pharmacol 57:869–875
Pomarol-Clotet E, Honey GD, Murray GK, Corlett PR, Absalom AR, Lee M, McKenna PJ, Bullmore ET, Fletcher PC (2006) Psychological effects of ketamine in healthy volunteers. Phenomenological study. Br J Psychiatry 189:173–179
Popik P, Khoo SY, Kuziak A, Golebiowska J, Potasiewicz A, Hogendorf A, Popik O, Matloka M, Moszczynski R, Nikiforuk A, Witkin JM (2020) Distinct cognitive and discriminative stimulus effects of ketamine enantiomers in rats. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 197:173011
Popik P, Layer RT, Skolnick P (1995) 100 years of ibogaine: neurochemical and pharmacological actions of a putative anti-addictive drug. Pharmacol Rev 47:235–253
Robbins TW (2002) The 5-choice serial reaction time task: behavioural pharmacology and functional neurochemistry. Psychopharmacology 163:362–380
Ross S, Bossis A, Guss J, Agin-Liebes G, Malone T, Cohen B, Mennenga SE, Belser A, Kalliontzi K, Babb J, Su Z, Corby P, Schmidt BL (2016) Rapid and sustained symptom reduction following psilocybin treatment for anxiety and depression in patients with life-threatening cancer: a randomized controlled trial. J Psychopharmacol 30:1165–1180
Sherwood AM, Halberstadt AL, Klein AK, McCorvy JD, Kaylo KW, Kargbo RB, Meisenheimer P (2020) Synthesis and biological evaluation of tryptamines found in hallucinogenic mushrooms: norbaeocystin, baeocystin, norpsilocin, and aeruginascin. Journal of Natural Products 83:461–467
Shirota O, Hakamata W, Goda Y (2003) Concise large-scale synthesis of psilocin and psilocybin, principal hallucinogenic constituents of “magic mushroom”. J Nat Products 66:885–887
Skolnick P, Popik P, Trullas R (2009) Glutamate-based antidepressants: 20 years on. Trends Pharmacol Sci 30:563–569
Smith JW, Gastambide F, Gilmour G, Dix S, Foss J, Lloyd K, Malik N, Tricklebank M (2011) A comparison of the effects of ketamine and phencyclidine with other antagonists of the NMDA receptor in rodent assays of attention and working memory. Psychopharmacology 217:255–269
Thönes S, Oberfeld D (2015) Time perception in depression: a meta-analysis. J Affect Disorders 175:359–372
Trullas R, Skolnick P (1990) Functional antagonists at the NMDA receptor complex exhibit antidepressant actions. Eur J Pharmacol 185:1–10
Vollenweider FX, Leenders KL, Øye I, Hell D, Angst J (1997) Differential psychopathology and patterns of cerebral glucose utilisation produced by (S)- and (R)-ketamine in healthy volunteers using positron emission tomography (PET). European Neuropsychopharmacol 7:25–38
Wearden J (2016) Methods commonly used in time perception research. The psychology of time perception. Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp 223-232
Witkin JM, Knutson DE, Rodriguez GJ, Shi S (2018) Rapid-acting antidepressants. Curr Pharm Des 24:2556–2563
Wittmann M, Carter O, Hasler F, Cahn BR, Grimberg U, Spring P, Hell D, Flohr H, Vollenweider FX (2007) Effects of psilocybin on time perception and temporal control of behaviour in humans. J Psychopharmacol 21:50–64
Zarate Jr. CA, Singh JB, Carlson PJ, Brutsche NE, Ameli R, Luckenbaugh DA, Charney DS, Manji HK (2006) A randomized trial of an N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist in treatment-resistant major depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 63:856–864
Zukin SR, Brady KT, Slifer BL, Balster RL (1984) Behavioral and biochemical stereoselectivity of sigma opiate/PCP receptors. Brain Res 294:174–177
Acknowledgements
Technical help of Martyna Krawczyk MSc and Agata Kuziak MSc is greatly appreciated.
Funding
This study is supported by the statutory activity of Maj Institute of Pharmacology. SYK was supported by a fellowship from the Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé (Award IDs: #270051 & #306413).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
PP and AN designed research; NMR and JG performed research; PP, JG, AH, PZ, RB, and SYK analyzed data; SYK wrote the TDT protocol; AH, PZ, and RB provided compounds; and PP wrote the paper.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Conflict of interest
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
This article belongs to a Special Issue on Psychopharmacology on Psychedelic Drugs
Supplementary Information
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Popik, P., Hogendorf, A., Bugno, R. et al. Effects of ketamine optical isomers, psilocybin, psilocin and norpsilocin on time estimation and cognition in rats. Psychopharmacology 239, 1689–1703 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-021-06020-5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-021-06020-5