Striking long-term beneficial effects of single dose psilocybin and psychedelic mushroom extract in the SAPAP3 rodent model of OCD-like excessive self-grooming.
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.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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 |
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/ ).