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Potential biomarker for depression and response to treatment identified

A potential biomarker for the presence of major depression and which could be used track the response to antidepressant therapy has been found

A potential biomarker which reveals the presence of major depression and which is able to track an individual’s response to treatment with antidepressants might be a useful diagnostic tool and create a platform for personalised medicine. This was the conclusion of a proof-of-concept study by a team led by researchers from Signant Health, Boston, USA.

Depression is the most common mental illness across the globe and the incidence has increased by 49.8% between 1990 and 2017, affecting around 25.8 million people. Furthermore, the incidence of major depression is also on the rise, with a US study in 2021 indicating that number of US adults with major depression aged 18-34 years increased from 34.6 to 47.5% between 2010 and 2018. Although treatment of depression with antidepressant drugs has become widespread, some evidence from a real-world study shows that only a third of patients achieve remission with the antidepressant, citalopram. A potential biomarker that not only identified those with major depression but which also enabled tracking of a patient’s response to treatment could therefore be invaluable to clinicians.

Research into depression suggests the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) cascade is down regulated in major depression but conversely up-regulated by antidepressant treatment. Moreover, G protein coupled receptors and their attendant G proteins and effectors, such as adenylyl cyclase, are involved in the generation of cAMP. Many neurotransmitter receptors, G proteins, and signalling effectors such as second-messenger-generating enzymes are present in lipid rafts and one particular protein, G-s alpha (GSA), appears to be the target of antidepressants, which facilitate the activation of adenylyl cyclase by making GSA more available.

In the present study, researchers hypothesised that treatment with an antidepressant would increases the concentration of GSA, enabling it to exit from the lipid raft and stimulate the enzyme, adenylyl cyclase. They used blood platelets to determine adenylyl cyclase activity based on its response to prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) stimulation, which served as a marker of the extent of GSA-adenylyl cyclase coupling in both patients with major depression and healthy controls. The level of depression was assessed using the Hamilton rating scale for depression (HamD) and included patients were required to have a score > 15 at the initial visit.

Findings

Using samples from 41 individuals with major depression and 44 healthy controls, baseline measurement revealed a significantly lower PGE1 activation in those with depression compared with controls (p = 0.02), suggesting that there was less GSA available. A total of 19 depressed individuals (6 men and 13 women) with a mean age of 50.6 years and a mean baseline HamD score of 20.4 consented to having a course of antidepressant therapy. After 6 weeks of treatment, there were 11 responders (HamD scores > 50% improvement from baseline) whose platelet samples demonstrated a significant increase in PGE1 stimulated adenylyl cyclase compared to non-responders (p = 0.05). In fact, treatment responders showed a 62% increase in mean PGE1 stimulation compared to baseline, compared to -4.6% decrease for non-responders.

The authors concluded that the translocation of GSA from lipid rafts, as reflected by an increased PGE1 stimulated adenylyl cyclase, after treatment with antidepressants, could be used as a potential biomarker for both major depression and patients response to therapy and called for future studies to determine the utility of this biomarker.

Citation

Targum SD et al. A novel peripheral biomarker for depression and antidepressant response Mol Psychiatry 2022






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