Jan 25, 2022

Toronto Scientists Hunting for Perfect Rhythm to Beat Depression Blues

Research, Partnerships
Collingridge lab at Sinai Health
Photo by Colin Dewar, Sinai Health

When it comes to finding a long-lasting treatment for depression, a team of Toronto scientists say it could come down to finding the perfect rhythm.

The approach, under development by scientists at the University of Toronto’s Temerty Faculty of Medicine, Sinai Health and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), has nothing to do with music and everything to do with tweaking an existing form of brain stimulation therapy.

To improve the technology and test it in patients, a team of four Toronto researchers today was awarded a $950,000 grant by Bell Let’s Talk and Brain Canada.

Professor Tarek Rajji
Professor Tarek Rajji

“It is a very exciting collaboration that combines bench and bedside research in the same project,” said Tarek Rajji, principal investigator and clinical lead on the project, who is a clinician scientist and professor in Temerty Medicine’s department of psychiatry.

The research centres around transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS, a form of brain stimulation therapy that’s been shown to hold enormous promise in helping patients with treatment-resistant depression. The approach uses a device to deliver pulses of magnetic stimulation to the prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain associated with mood regulation.

The basic science component of the project involves brain stimulation with mice to determine whether changing the spacing or tempo of the pulses to the brain could ultimately deliver long-lasting relief from depression symptoms.

Professor Graham Collingridge
Professor Graham Collingridge

“The pattern of stimulation is vital,” said Graham Collingridge, professor of physiology and director of the Tanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative Diseases at Temerty Medicine. “It has been recently discovered that instead of applying the rhythm within a short space of time, you have a break for a few minutes and then repeat the stimulation, the effect on synapses in the brain is stronger and longer-lasting.”

Collingridge, a senior investigator at Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute (LTRI) at Sinai Health, studies a process called long-term potentiation, in which a brief period of intense neuronal activity leads to a long-lasting increase in the strength of connections between the nerve cells.

In order to find the perfect pattern, Rajji and Collingridge are collaborating with Evelyn Lambe, an associate professor of physiology at Temerty Medicine, who is leading the work to optimize the stimulus parameters in the prefrontal cortex, the region targeted by TMS in patients, as part of the Bell Let’s Talk Brain Canada research grant.

Professor Evelyn Lambe
Professor Evelyn Lambe

"The goal is to optimize treatment to rebuild connections between neurons essential for mood regulation," said Lambe. Her lab's work investigating the impact of social isolation on the brain has become increasingly relevant to mental health during the COVID19 pandemic. "Social isolation and other stressors wear us down by impairing brain function at the cellular level," Lambe notes.

Rajji, who is executive director of the Toronto Dementia Research Alliance and chief of the adult neurodevelopment and geriatric psychiatry division at CAMH, will adapt the optimized stimulation parameters to humans using TMS and electroencephalograhy. His team will examine which pattern of stimulation leads to better brain plasticity in the frontal lobes of adults with acute depression.

Professor Sanjeev Socklingam
Professor Sanjeev Sockalingam

Throughout the project, Sanjeev Sockalingam, professor of psychiatry at Temerty Medicine and a clinician-scientist and vice president education at CAMH, will lead the knowledge translation component of the work. This will involve mental health clinicians, people with lived/living experience and families working with researchers from the start of the project.

“The integrated approach involving clinicians and service users will help us co-create knowledge that gets to people who can use it faster and more effectively,” said Sockalingam.

With files from Sinai Health, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, and U of T’s department of physiology.