Abstract

Post-inflammatory behaviours in rodents are widely used to model human depression and to test the efficacy of novel anti-depressants. Mice injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) display a depressive-like phenotype twenty-four hours after endotoxin administration. Despite the widespread use of this model, the mechanisms that underlie the persistent behavioural changes after the transient peripheral inflammatory response remain elusive. The study of the metabolome, the collection of all the small molecule metabolites in a sample, combined with multivariate statistical techniques provides a way of studying biochemical pathways influenced by an LPS challenge. Adult male CD-1 mice received an intraperitoneal injection of either LPS (0.83 mg/kg) or saline, and were assessed for depressive-like behaviour 24 h later. In a separate mouse cohort, pro-inflammatory cytokine gene expression and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomics measurements were made in brain tissue and blood. Statistical analyses included Independent Sample t-tests for gene expression data, and supervised multi-variate analysis using orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis for metabolomics. Both plasma and brain metabolites in male mice were altered following a single peripheral LPS challenge that led to depressive-like behaviour in the forced swim test. The plasma metabolites altered by LPS are involved in energy metabolism, including lipoproteins, glucose, creatine, and isoleucine. In the brain, glutamate, serine, and N-acetylaspartate (NAA) were reduced after LPS, whereas glutamine was increased. Serine-modulated glutamatergic signalling and changes in bioenergetics may mediate the behavioural phenotype induced by LPS. In light of other data supporting a central imbalance of glutamate-glutamine cycling in depression, our results suggest that aberrant central glutaminergic signalling may underpin the depressive-like behaviours that result from both inflammation and non-immune pathophysiology. Normalising glutaminergic signalling, rather than seeking to increase serotonergic signalling, might prove to be a more coherent approach to the development of new treatments for mood disorder.

Highlights

  • Post-inflammatory behaviours in rodents are widely used to model human depression and to test the efficacy of novel anti-depressants

  • The study focused on inflammation-induced fatality rather than behavioural changes, the results suggested that LPS administration affects components of energy metabolism, such as S-adenosyl methionine (SAM), and key Krebs cycle constituents glucose and ­citrate[30]

  • The current study has demonstrated that behavioural despair in mice observed 24 h after an injection of LPS, was associated with reduced glutamate and increased glutamine in the prefrontal cortex, and a decrease in lipids and glucose in the plasma

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Summary

Introduction

Post-inflammatory behaviours in rodents are widely used to model human depression and to test the efficacy of novel anti-depressants. Statistical analyses included Independent Sample t-tests for gene expression data, and supervised multi-variate analysis using orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis for metabolomics Both plasma and brain metabolites in male mice were altered following a single peripheral LPS challenge that led to depressive-like behaviour in the forced swim test. Brain concentrations of pro-inflammatory cytokines remained elevated 24 h after the LPS ­administration[16] While it is clear from previous investigations and our current work that the peripheral administration of LPS results in depressive-like behavioural changes, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. The study of the brain metabolome, in combination with multivariate statistical analysis, affords an opportunity to explore key biochemical changes that may contribute to pathophysiology in inflammation-associated depressive-like behaviour

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