Abstract

Molecular mechanisms underlying bipolar affective disorders are unknown. Difficulties arise from genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity of patients and the lack of animal models. Thus, we focused on only one patient (n = 1) with an extreme form of rapid cycling. Ribonucleic acid (RNA) from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) was analyzed in a three-tiered approach under widely standardized conditions. Firstly, RNA was extracted from PBMC of eight blood samples, obtained on two consecutive days within one particular episode, including two different consecutive depressive and two different consecutive manic episodes, and submitted to (1) screening by microarray hybridizations, followed by (2) detailed bioinformatic analysis, and (3) confirmation of episode-specific regulation of genes by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR).Secondly, results were validated in additional blood samples obtained one to two years later. Among gene transcripts elevated in depressed episodes were prostaglandin D synthetase (PTGDS) and prostaglandin D2 11-ketoreductase (AKR1C3), both involved in hibernation. We hypothesized them to account for some of the rapid cycling symptoms. A subsequent treatment approach over 5 months applying the cyclooxygenase inhibitor celecoxib (2 x 200 mg daily) resulted in reduced severity rating of both depressed and manic episodes. This case suggests that rapid cycling is a systemic disease, resembling hibernation, with prostaglandins playing a mediator role.

Highlights

  • Rapid cycling syndrome is a bipolar affective disorder, amounting to 10% to 30% of the bipolar population

  • The genes involved in prostaglandin metabolism, prostaglandin D synthetase (PTGDS), and AKR1C3

  • We identified two neurodevelopmental genes that revealed opposing gene expression: NRG1 was expressed higher in manic, SPON2 in depressed episodes (Figure 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid cycling syndrome is a bipolar affective disorder, amounting to 10% to 30% of the bipolar population. It is characterized by at least four episodes per year and rapid shifts between cycles. Patients with bipolar affective disorder, as well as patients with rapid cycling syndrome, typically experience their first major mood episode during adolescence [1,2,3,4,5]. Gene expression data from post mortem brains of bipolar patients were compared with those of healthy controls in two independent studies [6,7]. While post mortem approaches certainly cannot reveal cyclic changes of gene expression, these studies failed to yield a single overlapping candidate gene for bipolar disease. The lack of an adequate animal model for bipolar disorder demands novel experimental approaches

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