Literature DB >> 20357926

Oxidative stress and anxiety: relationship and cellular pathways.

Jaouad Bouayed1, Hassan Rammal, Rachid Soulimani.   

Abstract

High O(2) consumption, modest antioxidant defenses and a lipid-rich constitution make the brain highly vulnerable to redox imbalances. Oxidative damage in the brain causes nervous system impairment. Recently, oxidative stress has also been implicated in depression, anxiety disorders and high anxiety levels. The findings which establish a link between oxidative stress and pathological anxiety have inspired a number of other recent studies focusing on the link between oxidative status and normal anxiety and also on a possible causal relationship between cellular oxidative stress and emotional stress. This review examines the recent discoveries made on the link between oxidative status and normal anxiety levels and the putative role of oxidative stress in genesis of anxiety. We discuss the different opinions and questions that exist in the field and review the methodological approaches that are being used to determine a causal relationship between oxidative and emotional stress.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antioxidants; anxiety; behavior; oxidative status; oxidative stress; reactive oxygen species

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2009        PMID: 20357926      PMCID: PMC2763246          DOI: 10.4161/oxim.2.2.7944

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev        ISSN: 1942-0994            Impact factor:   6.543


Introduction

Anxiety is an aversive emotional state, in which the feeling of fear is disproportionate to the nature of the threat.1 In response to threatening situations, the feeling of the emotion that constitutes the subjective feature of anxiety is accompanied by emotional stress, which involves behavioral, expressive and physiological features, such as an avoidance of the source of the danger, assuming defensive postures and an increase in blood pressure, respectively.1,2 Anxiety is a normal emotional response to a threat or potential threat. When this emotion is inappropriate, extreme and persistent, it is classified as pathological.1,3 Anxiety is implicated in a number of psychiatric disorders, such as depression, panic attacks, phobias, generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder.3 Anxiety disorders affect approximately 28.8% of the US population,4 imposing both an individual and a social burden that amounts to a total cost of $42.3 billion in the US in 1990.5 Anxiety disorders are the most common class of psychiatric disorders in the US4 and many other countries.6 According to an ESEMeD study including six European countries, the 12-month prevalence of inappropriate anxiety was 6.4%.7 In the most recent systematic review of studies conducted in 16 European countries, however, this value was estimated to be 12%.8 In an obese population in the UK, 56% of patients met the minimum criteria for an anxiety disorder.9 It is estimated that one-eighth of the total population worldwide suffers from inappropriate anxiety.10 Population-based studies have shown that anxiety disorders frequently go untreated.11,12 Predominantly, the research that has been performed on anxiety has focused on the regulatory systems, including gamma-aminobutyric acidergic (GABAergic) and serotoninergic systems among others. However, Kuloglu et al.13,14 recently established a link between oxidative stress and certain anxiety disorders (obsessive-compulsive disorder and panic disorder), demonstrating that other systems, such as oxidative metabolism, can affect the regulation of anxiety. These findings, which establish a link between oxidative stress and pathological anxiety, inspired a number of other recent studies focusing on the link between oxidative status and normal anxiety (Table 1) and also on a possible causal relationship between cellular oxidative stress and emotional stress.
Table 1

Data establishing the link between pathological/normal anxiety and oxidative cell pathways and mechanisms

SubjectsExpression of antioxidant genesIndirect evaluation of oxygen-derived species Activity of antioxidant proteinsLipid peroxidation markersDirect evaluation of oxygen-derived species Intracellular ROS levels assessed by using the 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA) sensor
Pathological anxietyPatients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and panic disorder Vs. healthy controls (Kuloglu et al.13,14)-In erthrocytes: Superoxide dismutase*, catalase, glutathione peroxidase*In plasma: Malondialdehyde*-
Normal trait-anxietyMouse strains with high- Vs. low-anxiety-related phenotypes (Hovatta et al.25)In brain:Glyoxalase 1* and glutathione reductase 1*In brain: Glyoxalase 1* and glutathione reductase 1*--
Anxious Vs. non-anxious Swiss albino mice (Rammal et al.41,42)---In brain and peripheral cells: Neurones*, glial cells*, granulocytes*, monocytes* and lymphocytes*

significantly different from controls (healthy humans, strains with low-anxiety-related phenotypes, non anxious mice).

It is well known that low/moderate concentrations of reactive oxygen species (ROS) affect a great number of physiological functions.15 However, when ROS concentration exceeds the anti-oxidative capacity of an organism, animal cells enter a state termed oxidative stress, in which the excess ROS induces oxidative damage on cellular components.15,16 As a result, oxidative stress has been implicated in a large range of diseases, including cancer, diabetes, male infertility, autoimmune diseases, atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disorders.15–17 The brain is highly vulnerable to oxidative stress due to its high O2 consumption, its modest antioxidant defenses and its lipid-rich constitution.18,19 Human brain utilizes 20% of oxygen consumed by the body even though this organ constitutes only about 2% of the body weight.19,20 When the production of oxygen-derived metabolites prevails over the brain defense systems, however, oxidative damage to nucleic acids, proteins and neuronal membrane lipids, which are rich in highly polyunsaturated fatty acids, can occur.15,16,19 In presence of oxidative stress, the lipid-rich constitution of brain favors lipid peroxidation that results in decrease in membrane fluidity and damage in membrane proteins inactivating receptors, enzymes and ion channels.15,16,19 As a result, oxidative stress can alter neurotransmission, neuronal function and overall brain activity.16,21,22 Oxidative stress has been associated with several diseases which are specific for nervous system impairment including neurodegenerative diseases and neuropsychiatric diseases, such as schizophrenia and major depressive disorder.15,16,23,24 The intrinsic oxidative vulnerability of the brain has led some authors to suggest that oxidative damage may be a plausible pathogenic factor for certain neurological diseases including neuropsychiatric disorders.18 In this review, we discuss the relationship between oxidative stress and normal anxiety by presenting the recent advances in the field and the different views that exist. We also review the methodological approach for determining the causal relationship between oxidative stress and emotional stress.

A Link Between Oxidative Stress Metabolic Pathways and Anxiety-Related Phenotypes

In 2005, Hovatta et al.25 identified a close relationship between antioxidative defense mechanisms and anxiety-related phenotypes in six inbred mouse strains. They found that, in the brain, the expression of glutathione reductase 1 and glyoxalase 1, which are genes involved in antioxidative metabolism, is highly correlated with anxiety-related phenotypes. Furthermore, they also found that the activity of these enzymes is highest in the most anxious mice and lowest in the least anxious strains. These authors were the first to demonstrate a link between oxidative stress metabolic pathways and normal anxiety. A link between oxidative stress and emotional stress is not surprising, since it is well accepted that oxidative damage in the brain causes an impairment of the nervous system. In living organisms, an imbalance between oxidant production and antioxidant protection that favors oxidants causes a state termed oxidative stress. In this state, there can be differences gene expression, protein conformation and cellular signaling. This state may also alter neurotransmission, neuronal function and overall brain activity, as well as disrupting membrane integrity; even neuronal cell death may result.15,16,21,22 Most studies have shown that anxiety is controlled by the nervous system and that GABAergic and serotoninergic systems play important roles in the regulation of anxiety.1,26 Abnormalities in these regulatory systems in rodents, which are used as translational models for human anxiety,25,27,28 can result in anxious behavior.26 Altering the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which is implicated in stress responses29 and anxiety disorders, could also impact the emotional response.29,30 Nevertheless, Hovatta et al.25 obtained surprising results in a genetic manipulation using lentivirus-mediated gene transfer: local overexpression of glutathione reductase 1 and glyoxalase 1 in the cingulated cortex of the murine brain results in an increase of anxiety-like behavior, while inhibition of glyoxalase 1 expression produces low-anxiety mice. Thus, Hovatta et al.25 were able to make a causal link between the antioxidative status of the brain and anxiety-related behavior and hypothesize that glyoxalase 1 and glutathione reductase 1 regulate anxiety in mice. It is worth mentioning that in vivo, antioxidant genes are overexpressed in response to an uncontrolled production of ROS. Indeed, in vivo, excessive ROS accumulation induces the overexpression of the glutathione redox system, including glutathione reductase, and a general overexpression of endogenous antioxidants.31,32 In the lentivirus experiments of Hovatta et al.25, however, the overexpression of the transgenes (glyoxalase 1 and glutathione reductase 1) was induced in vivo with a lentiviral vector and not an excessive production of toxic oxygen metabolites. Clearly, the mechanism by which these enzymes regulate anxiety is of great interest.26 During the same period in which the Hovatta et al.25 study was being conducted, other studies were performed on two Swiss CD1 mouse lines with contrasting anxiety-like behavioral phenotypes. These mice were generated from wild type mice after >15 generations of selection. Results from these studies have led researchers to propose that glyoxalase 1 might be a biological marker for trait anxiety.33,34 These results are discordant with those of Hovatta et al.25 however, and complicate the understanding of the relationship between oxidative stress and trait anxiety. Krömer et al.33 and Ditzen et al.34 examined the expression of glyoxalase 1 in several areas of the brain areas and in red blood cells and found that this protein is expressed more in a line with a low-anxiety-related behavioral phenotype than in a line with a high-anxiety-related behavioral phenotype. It is worth noting that Hovatta et al.25 suggested that there is a link between glyoxalase 1 and oxidative stress but that this link is indirect.35 Indeed, glyoxalase 1 is an enzyme of the glyoxalase system, which protects against carbonyl stress; glutathione is a determinant cofactor for the enzymatic reaction that is catalyzed by glyoxalase 1.35–37

A Link Between Oxidative Stress Metabolic Pathways and Anxiety-Related Behavior

The disagreements in the data of Hovatta et al.25, Krömer et al.33 and Ditzen et al.34 can be partly explained by the differences in the genotypes of the strains.35 Thus, it would be interesting to compare in the same strain the oxidative status of mice with contrasting levels of anxiety, rather than compare the oxidative status of strains that differ in their anxiety-related phenotypes. We have observed that naive Swiss albino male mice have a large heterogeneity in their anxiety levels.38 In first order regression analyses of the performances of mice in the light/dark choice test, which are used as a behavioral indices of anxiety, and the intracellular ROS accumulation in blood granulocytes, we found correlation coefficients (R2) ranging from 0.61 (p < 0.01) to 0.73 (p < 0.001) (Fig. 1). Our results suggest that there is a positive correlation between peripheral blood cell oxidative status and anxiety-related behavior in the light/dark box in Swiss albino male mice.38
Figure 1

Linear correlation between intracellular redox status and different parameters used for assessment of anxiety-related behavior in mice (n = 18). Correlation of peripheral blood granulocyte oxidative status with latency of first crossing from dark to lit box (A), time spent in lit box (B) and number of transitions between two boxes (C), respectively. Fluorescence intensity (FI) expressed as a decimal logarithm. FI emitted by granulocytes is due to oxidation of intracellular DCFH-DA by ROS (data published by Bouayed et al.38 in Eur J Pharmacol).

Levels of ROS can be evaluated directly with sensors, such as 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA),39,40 or indirectly by measuring the levels of certain antioxidant enzymes, byproducts of lipid peroxidation or some transition metals, such as copper, zinc and iron.13,14 In our study, the intracellular redox status of the cells was evaluated using the tracer DCFH-DA, a well known sensor of ROS.39,40 To confirm the relationship between oxidative stress and emotional stress, we comparatively evaluated the peripheral oxidative status of mice with contrasting levels of anxiety (anxious and non-anxious). Mice with intermediate behaviors were eliminated.41 We found that high anxiety in mice in the light-dark box is accompanied by significantly high levels of intracellular ROS in lymphocytes, granulocytes and monocytes (Table 2). Our results confirm that there is the relationship between the level of intracellular ROS in peripheral blood cells and anxiety-related behavior in mice.41
Table 2

Intracellular ROS accumulation in peripheral immune cells of anxious and non-anxious mice

Mean fluorescent intensity (arbitrary units)
Type of cellsAnxious miceNon-anxious mice
Lymphocytes215 ± 31*135 ± 12
Monocytes46 ± 8*25 ± 4
Granulocytes1635 ± 375**418 ± 87

The mean fluorescent intensity corresponds to fluorescence resulting from intracellular DCFH-DA oxidation by intracellular ROS. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. (n = 10). *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01. (data published by Rammal et al.41 in Eur J Pharmacol).

These results prompted us to study the oxidative status of the brain in mice with contrasting levels of anxiety. Using the same behavioral approach to distinguish between anxious and non-anxious mice, we found that anxiety in mice is accompanied by markedly elevated levels of ROS in neuronal and glial cells within the cerebellum and hippocampus, as well as in neurons of the cerebral cortex and in blood monocytes, granulocytes and lymphocytes (Table 3). As a consequence, we suggest that an imbalance in the redox system of anxious mice plays a role in neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, predisposing them to recurrent infection and chronic inflammation.42 The results of our studies38,41,42 are in good concordance with the initial findings of Hovatta et al.25 and show a clear link between oxidative stress and trait anxiety, but our findings do not permit us to declare a causal relationship between these stresses.
Table 3

Intracellular ROS accumulation in cerebral and peripheral cells of anxious and non-anxious mice

Mean fluorescent intensity (arbitrary units)
Type of cellsAnxious miceNon-anxious mice
Neurons of cerebral cortex1223 ± 232**177 ± 76
Neurons of cerebellum546 ± 128*227 ± 41
Neurons of hippocampus1749 ± 566*227 ± 51
Glial cells of cerebral cortex429 ± 48310 ± 72
Glial cells of cerebellum343 ± 36*195 ± 31
Glial cells of hippocampus468 ± 43*319 ± 29
Lymphocytes251 ± 46*152 ± 11
Monocytes56 ± 9*35 ± 2.5
Granulocytes1979 ± 405**448 ± 77

The mean fluorescent intensity corresponds to fluorescence resulting from intracellular DCFH-DA oxidation by intracellular ROS. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. (n = 10). *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01. (data published by Rammal et al.42 in Brain Behav Immun).

In agreement with our recent findings,41,42 Yasunari et al.43 observed a significant relationship between trait anxiety and ROS formation in monocytes of hypertensive individuals. Recently, Masood et al.29 published work that contributes to the understanding of the relationship between oxidative stress and anxiety. They examined the direct effect of oxidative stress on anxiety-like behavior and established that oxidative stress leads to anxiogenic behavior in mice. They found that treating mice with buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO), an inducer of oxidative stress, induces anxious behavior through the NADPH oxidase pathway. The anxiogenic behavior due to BSO treatment was observed in several mouse models of anxiety, including elevated plus maze, hole-board and open field tests. Masood et al.29 induced oxidative stress in mice by depleting glutathione with BSO inhibition of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase. Glutathione depletion causes a myriad of cellular stresses, including oxidative, nitrosative and carbonyl stresses, as glutathione is an important determinant of the oxygen, nitrogen and dicarbonyl metabolisms.15,16,35,44 Excessive production of ROS induces oxidative damage of cellular structures;15,16,19,45 production of reactive nitrogen species triggers nitrosylation reactions, which can alter the structure of proteins to inhibit their normal function;15,16,46 excessive accumulation of reactive dicarbonyl compounds leads to damage of protein and nucleotides by dicarbonyl glycation.35–37

Indirect Evidence for the Causal Link Between Oxidative Stress and Anxiety

Recent data from Desrumaux et al.47, Souza et al.48 and Berry et al.49 provide indirect evidence for the causal link between oxidative stress and anxiety-related behavior. Desrumaux et al.47 showed that vitamin E deficiency in the mouse brain significantly increases the levels of central oxidative stress markers, resulting in anxiogenic behavior without abnormalities in the locomotor performance of the mice. Souza et al.48 demonstrated in rats that the consumption of a highly palatable diet enriched with sucrose leads to an obese phenotype, increases protein oxidation in the frontal cortex and induces anxiety-like behavior in the dark/light choice test without altering locomotion in an open field test. Berry et al.49 showed that mice developed anxious behavior during aging, likely due to the accumulation of oxidative damage, which is a characteristic of the aging process in animals.50,51 In addition, Berry et al.49 showed that a deletion of the p66 longevity gene in mice, which results in lower levels of oxidative stress and an extended life span, decreases anxiety-related behavior. Overall, the data presented in these reports suggest that oxidative stress can provoke anxious behavior in rodents.

Conclusion

This review summarizes the data to support a link between oxidative stress and anxiety. While all of the data demonstrate that there is a link between oxidative stress and high-anxiety-related behavior, a cause-effect relationship has yet to be completely established. Some of these studies suggest that oxidative stress causes anxiety-related behaviors but do not explain the underlying mechanisms. While there are some limits in the approach to establish the anxiogenic effect of oxidative stress, the available data are consistent this causal relationship. The potential causal role of oxidative stress on anxiety may generate interest in antioxidants. Masood et al.29 were able to show that oxidative stress-related anxiety can be reversed in mice upon inhibition of NADPH oxidase or phosphodiesterase-2, enzyme that is indirectly implicated in oxidative stress mechanisms. Surprisingly, they found that diazepam, which is a well known anxiolytic, does not fully reverse the oxidative stress-related anxiety. These results point to a possible use for antioxidants in the prevention or reduction of high anxiety. Further research will be necessary to show whether anxious subjects need more antioxidants than non-anxious subjects. Recent work52,53 has shown that some dietary polyphenols have both anxiolytic and antioxidant effects, which may be beneficial to anxious subjects.
  50 in total

1.  Positive correlation between peripheral blood granulocyte oxidative status and level of anxiety in mice.

Authors:  Jaouad Bouayed; Hassan Rammal; Chafique Younos; Rachid Soulimani
Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol       Date:  2007-03-07       Impact factor: 4.432

2.  Deletion of the life span determinant p66Shc prevents age-dependent increases in emotionality and pain sensitivity in mice.

Authors:  Alessandra Berry; Francesca Capone; Marco Giorgio; Pier Giuseppe Pelicci; E R de Kloet; Enrico Alleva; Luisa Minghetti; Francesca Cirulli
Journal:  Exp Gerontol       Date:  2006-06-30       Impact factor: 4.032

3.  Protein biomarkers in a mouse model of extremes in trait anxiety.

Authors:  Claudia Ditzen; Archana M Jastorff; Melanie S Kessler; Mirjam Bunck; Larysa Teplytska; Angelika Erhardt; Simone A Krömer; Jeeva Varadarajulu; Bianca-Sabrina Targosz; Eser F Sayan-Ayata; Florian Holsboer; Rainer Landgraf; Christoph W Turck
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2006-06-14       Impact factor: 5.911

4.  Lifetime prevalence and age-of-onset distributions of DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication.

Authors:  Ronald C Kessler; Patricia Berglund; Olga Demler; Robert Jin; Kathleen R Merikangas; Ellen E Walters
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2005-06

5.  Highly palatable diet consumption increases protein oxidation in rat frontal cortex and anxiety-like behavior.

Authors:  C G Souza; J D Moreira; I R Siqueira; A G Pereira; D K Rieger; D O Souza; T M Souza; L V Portela; M L S Perry
Journal:  Life Sci       Date:  2007-05-17       Impact factor: 5.037

6.  Reversal of oxidative stress-induced anxiety by inhibition of phosphodiesterase-2 in mice.

Authors:  Anbrin Masood; Ahmed Nadeem; S Jamal Mustafa; James M O'Donnell
Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther       Date:  2008-05-02       Impact factor: 4.030

7.  Overview of key data from the European Study of the Epidemiology of Mental Disorders (ESEMeD).

Authors:  Jordi Alonso; Jean-Pierre Lépine
Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 4.384

8.  The impact of high anxiety level on the oxidative status of mouse peripheral blood lymphocytes, granulocytes and monocytes.

Authors:  Hassan Rammal; Jaouad Bouayed; Chafique Younos; Rachid Soulimani
Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol       Date:  2008-06-18       Impact factor: 4.432

Review 9.  Recent advances in the neurobiology of anxiety disorders: implications for novel therapeutics.

Authors:  Sanjay J Mathew; Rebecca B Price; Dennis S Charney
Journal:  Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet       Date:  2008-05-15       Impact factor: 3.908

10.  Chlorogenic acid, a polyphenol from Prunus domestica (Mirabelle), with coupled anxiolytic and antioxidant effects.

Authors:  Jaouad Bouayed; Hassan Rammal; Amadou Dicko; Chafique Younos; Rachid Soulimani
Journal:  J Neurol Sci       Date:  2007-08-14       Impact factor: 3.181

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  132 in total

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Authors:  Adeline Del Rosario; Mindy M McDermott; Jun Panee
Journal:  Br J Nutr       Date:  2012-02-07       Impact factor: 3.718

2.  Adherence to the dietary approaches to stop hypertension (DASH) dietary pattern and mental health in Iranian university students.

Authors:  Shiva Faghih; Siavash Babajafari; Afsaneh Mirzaei; Masoumeh Akhlaghi
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2019-04-24       Impact factor: 5.614

Review 3.  Oxidative Stress and the Central Nervous System.

Authors:  Samina Salim
Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther       Date:  2016-10-17       Impact factor: 4.030

4.  Diets rich in saturated fat and fructose induce anxiety and depression-like behaviours in the rat: is there a role for lipid peroxidation?

Authors:  Silvia Gancheva; Bistra Galunska; Maria Zhelyazkova-Savova
Journal:  Int J Exp Pathol       Date:  2017-12-06       Impact factor: 1.925

5.  Assessment of Oxidant-Antioxidant Status and Stress Factor in Recurrent Aphthous Stomatitis Patients: Case Control Study.

Authors:  Sherin Ziaudeen; Rathy Ravindran
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2017-03-01

6.  Enhanced hippocampus-dependent memory and reduced anxiety in mice over-expressing human catalase in mitochondria.

Authors:  Reid H J Olsen; Lance A Johnson; Damian G Zuloaga; Charles L Limoli; Jacob Raber
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2013-03-06       Impact factor: 5.372

7.  Clinical relevance of tag single nucleotide polymorphisms within the CAT gene in patients with PTSD in the Chongqing Han population.

Authors:  Zhao-Xia Duan; Wei Li; Jian-Yi Kang; Jie-Yuan Zhang; Kui-Jun Chen; Bing-Cang Li; Mei He; Jian-Min Wang
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Pathol       Date:  2014-03-15

8.  Effect of a trans fatty acid-enriched diet on mitochondrial, inflammatory, and oxidative stress parameters in the cortex and hippocampus of Wistar rats.

Authors:  Rafael Longhi; Roberto Farina Almeida; Leticia Ferreira Pettenuzzo; Débora Guerini Souza; Letiane Machado; André Quincozes-Santos; Diogo Onofre Souza
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2017-05-31       Impact factor: 5.614

Review 9.  Exogenous antioxidants--Double-edged swords in cellular redox state: Health beneficial effects at physiologic doses versus deleterious effects at high doses.

Authors:  Jaouad Bouayed; Torsten Bohn
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2010 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 6.543

Review 10.  The vitamin nicotinamide: translating nutrition into clinical care.

Authors:  Kenneth Maiese; Zhao Zhong Chong; Jinling Hou; Yan Chen Shang
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2009-09-09       Impact factor: 4.411

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