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Striking long-term beneficial effects of single dose psilocybin and psychedelic mushroom extract in the SAPAP3 rodent model of OCD-like excessive self-grooming.

Molecular psychiatry
March 1, 2025
Michal Brownstien et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleAnimal Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the therapeutic potential of psilocybin in reducing excessive self-grooming and anxiety behaviors in SAPAP3 KO mice, a model for OCD-like symptoms.

Results Summary

Psilocybin and psychedelic mushroom extract significantly reduced self-grooming behaviors, head-body twitches, and anxiety in SAPAP3 KO mice, with effects persisting up to 7 weeks in responders. The mushroom extract showed superior effects on secondary outcomes compared to pure psilocybin.

Population

SAPAP3 KO mice (28 male, 22 female) exhibiting OCD-like behaviors.

Effective Dosage

4.4 mg/kg, single intraperitoneal injection.

Duration

21-day observation period, with some effects tracked up to 7 weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
vehicle control
increase
total self-grooming
SAPAP3 KO mice
118.71 ± 95.96%
manifested a 118.71 ± 95.96% increase
#1
psilocybin
decrease
total self-grooming
SAPAP3 KO mice
14.60 ± 17.90%
decreased by 14.60 ± 17.90%
#2
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
total self-grooming
SAPAP3 KO mice
19.20 ± 20.05%
decreased by 19.20 ± 20.05%
#3
psilocybin
decrease
head-body twitches
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed a significant improvement
#4
psilocybin
decrease
anxiety
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed a significant improvement
#5
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
head-body twitches
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed a significant improvement
#6
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
anxiety
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed a significant improvement
#7
psilocybin
decrease
excessive self-grooming
SAPAP3 KO mice that responded to psilocybin
-
the beneficial effect of a single treatment persisted up to 7 weeks
#8
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
excessive self-grooming
SAPAP3 KO mice that responded to psychedelic mushroom extract
-
the beneficial effect of a single treatment persisted up to 7 weeks
#9
psilocybin
decrease
excessive self-grooming
Mice initially treated with vehicle and non-responsive
-
showed a clear and lasting therapeutic response
#10
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
excessive self-grooming
Mice initially treated with vehicle and non-responsive
-
showed a clear and lasting therapeutic response
#11
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
head-body twitches
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed superior effects in alleviating
#12
psychedelic mushroom extract
decrease
anxiety
SAPAP3 KO mice
-
showed superior effects in alleviating
#13
Abstract

Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a highly prevalent disorder that causes serious disability. Available treatments leave 40% or more of people with OCD significantly symptomatic. There is an urgent need for novel therapeutic approaches. Mice that carry a homozygous deletion of the SAPAP3 gene (SAPAP3 KO) manifest a phenotype of excessive self-grooming, tic-like head-body twitches and anxiety. These behaviors closely resemble pathological self-grooming behaviors observed in humans in conditions that overlap with OCD. Following a preliminary report that the tryptaminergic psychedelic, psilocybin, may reduce symptoms in patients with OCD, we undertook a randomized controlled trial of psilocybin in 50 SAPAP3 KO mice (28 male, 22 female). Mice that fulfilled inclusion criteria were randomly assigned to a single intraperitoneal injection of psilocybin (4.4 mg/kg), psychedelic mushroom extract (encompassing the same psilocybin dose) or vehicle control and were evaluated after 2, 12, and 21 days by a rater blind to treatment allocation for grooming characteristics, head-body twitches, anxiety, and other behavioral features. Mice treated with vehicle (n = 18) manifested a 118.71 ± 95.96% increase in total self-grooming (the primary outcome measure) over the 21-day observation period. In contrast, total self-grooming decreased by 14.60 ± 17.90% in mice treated with psilocybin (n = 16) and by 19.20 ± 20.05% in mice treated with psychedelic mushroom extract (n = 16) (p = 0.001 for effect of time; p = 0.0001 for time × treatment interaction). Five mice were dropped from the vehicle group because they developed skin lesions; 4 from the psilocybin group and none from the psychedelic mushroom extract group. Secondary outcome measures such as head-body twitches and anxiety all showed a significant improvement over 21 days. Notably, in mice that responded to psilocybin (n = 12) and psychedelic mushroom extract (n = 13), the beneficial effect of a single treatment persisted up to 7 weeks. Mice initially treated with vehicle and non-responsive, showed a clear and lasting therapeutic response when treated with a single dose of psilocybin or psychedelic mushroom extract and followed for a further 3 weeks. While equivalent to psilocybin in overall effect on self-grooming, psychedelic mushroom extract showed superior effects in alleviating head-body twitches and anxiety. These findings strongly justify clinical trials of psilocybin in the treatment of OCD and further studies aimed at elucidating mechanisms that underlie the long-term effects to alleviate excessive self-grooming observed in this study. Prepared with BioRender ( https://www.biorender.com/ ).

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnimalsPsilocybinMiceMaleGroomingDisease Models, AnimalHallucinogensFemaleObsessive-Compulsive DisorderMice, KnockoutNerve Tissue ProteinsAnxietyAgaricalesBehavior, Animal
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety70
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations6
Citations/Year6.0
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.05
Weight Score2.33
Normalized Score0.78
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