Abstract
Adolescence is a particularly important period for brain development and is also when mood disorders typically emerge. Several psychiatric illnesses exhibit mitochondrial dysfunction, elevated inflammation, and impaired white matter integrity. This study explored the intersection of mitochondrial health, NLRP3 inflammasome activation, and white matter integrity in a small cohort of 29 adolescent patients with mood disorders (bipolar disorder (BD): n = 11, major depressive disorder (MDD): n = 19) and 19 healthy controls. In this sample, adolescents with mood disorders showed lower fractional anisotropy of the ventral cingulum bundle than healthy controls. Across all adolescents, we demonstrated a significant relationship between mitochondrial electron transport chain gene expression, and NLRP3 inflammasome gene expression and activation. Furthermore, circulating cell free mitochondrial DNA was associated with lower white matter integrity in the anterior thalamic radiation. Exploratory subgroup analyses revealed that adolescents with bipolar disorder exhibited lower levels of mitochondrial gene expression and volume, along with increased sensitivity to NLRP3 inflammasome activation compared to adolescents with unipolar depression. Overall, our results reveal relationships between peripherally-measured endpoints of mitochondrial health and NLRP3 inflammasome activation, and centrally measured endpoints of white matter integrity in adolescents. Together with subtle patterns of aberrant neural and biological structure and function in association with mood disorder diagnoses, these results may shed light on the pathophysiology of disease in this early phase of illness.
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