| Literature DB >> 24447830 |
Joshua Bloom1, Yousef Al-Abed.
Abstract
Although major depressive disorder imposes a serious public health burden and affects nearly one in six individuals in developed countries over their lifetimes, there is still no consensus on its pathophysiology. Inflammation and cytokines have emerged as a promising new avenue in depression research, and, in particular, macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) has been shown to be significant in depression physiology. In this review we summarize current research on MIF and depression. We highlight the arguments for MIF as a pro- and antidepressant species and discuss the potential implications for therapeutics.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24447830 PMCID: PMC3901340 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-11-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Animal studies of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in the setting of depression or depressive etiologies
| Conboy | Adult male Wistar rats (48) | Chronic unpredictable stress, chronic corticosterone | Immunohistochemistry for Ki-67, MIF-IR cells in dentate gyrus | MIF co-localizes with proliferative markers |
| MIF levels correlate with neurogenesis | ||||
| WT and MIF KO mice (16) | Fluoxetine (ip, od/14days), ISO1 (od/14days) | Immunohistochemistry for PCNA, DCX, BrdU, Ki-67, MIF-IR cells in dentate gyrus | Loss of MIF results in decreased basal and antidepressant-stimulated neurogenesis | |
| WT and MIF KO mice (9, 16, 20, 8) | Acute stress exposure | ELISA for serum corticosterone, Western blot for receptor expression | MIF KO mice show no significant difference from WT in levels of serum glucocorticoids or receptor expression | |
| WT and MIF KO mice (52, 20) | None | FST, water maze, acoustic fear conditioning | MIF KO mice show increased behavioral despair | |
| MIF KO mice show impaired hippocampal spatial learning and memory, intact amygdalar fear conditioning | ||||
| Moon | Male Sprague–Dawley rats (13, 4) | Voluntary exercise (running wheel), ECS (55 mA pulses, 100/s) | RT-PCR, Western blot, immunohistochemistry for MIF mRNA/protein | MIF mRNA is upregulated by exercise and ECS |
| Neuro-2A and RBL-2H3 cells (3); WT and MIF KO mice (12 to 16); male Sprague–Dawley rats (8 to 12) | MIF (300 ng/mL), exercise/ECS (see above), MIF (icv), CD74 siRNA, CT04 (5ug/mL), U0126 (10 uM) | RT-PCR for candidate genes (Bdnf, Fgf2) and neurogenesis genes (Dcx, Pax6), HPLC for 5HT, Western blot for | MIF induces expression of BDNF and Tph2, and also increases intracellular concentrations of 5HT | |
| Effects on BDNF, Tph2, and 5HT are CD74 and ERK1/2 dependent | ||||
| WT and MIF KO mice (12 to 16); male Sprague–Dawley rats (16 to 20) | Exercise (see above), MIF (icv) | FST | MIF KO mice show diminished antidepressant effects of exercise | |
| Exogenous recombinant MIF has antidepressant activity |
ECS = electroconvulsive shock; FST = forced swim test; icv = intracerebroventricular injection; ip = intraperitoneal injection; IR = immunoreactive; KO = knockout; od = once daily; WT = wild-type.
Controlled studies of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in major depressive disorder (MDD) or depressive mood
| Hawkley | 75 subjects | BDI | Public speaking stress task (once) | Serum MIF (0, 15 minutes) | MIF levels are increased in subjects showing mild to moderate depression (BDI) |
| MIF levels are unaffected by the public speaking stress task | |||||
| Edwards | 126 healthy subjects | BDI | Public speaking stress task (once) | ELISA for serum MIF (0, 3, 15, 45 minutes) | MIF levels are increased at baseline in subjects showing high depressive symptoms (BDI) |
| UCLA-R | |||||
| MIF levels do not change over the time course measured | |||||
| Christian | 22 pregnant subjects | CES-D | Vaccination for influenza virus (once) | ELISA for serum MIF (0, 1 weeks) | Pregnant women with depressive symptoms (CES-D) show increased MIF levels at 1 week |
| Katsuura | 209 healthy subjects | Zung-SDS | None | Multiplex suspension array for serum levels of multiple immune mediators (0) | MIF levels are not significantly associated with depressive symptoms (SDS) |
| Musil | 32 MDD patients, 20 healthy controls | Treatment with reboxetine and add-on celecoxib (5weeks) | ELISA for serum MIF, TGFB, and sCD14 (0, 3, 5 weeks) | MIF levels are increased at baseline in MDD patients | |
| HRSD | |||||
| MIF levels are unchanged during reboxetine treatment | |||||
| Celecoxib reduces HamD scores but does not affect MIF levels | |||||
| Cattaneo | 74 MDD patients, 34 healthy controls | Treatment with escitalopram or nortryptiline (8 weeks) | qPCR for serum leukocyte mRNA levels of several candidate genes (0, 8 weeks) | MIF mRNA levels are increased at baseline in treatment-responsive MDD patients; MIF mRNA levels decrease during treatment, but with no correlation to treatment response | |
| MADRS | |||||
| HRSD | |||||
| BDI |
All studies collected serum from subjects at the times indicated (0 = baseline) for measurements of peripheral MIF levels. BDI = Beck Depression Inventory; CES-D = Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; DSM-IV = Diagnostics and Statistics Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition; HRSD = Hamilton Depression Scale 17-item version; MADRS = Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale; SDS = Self-Rating Depression Scale; UCLA-R = Revised UCLA Loneliness Scale.
Figure 1Putative roles for macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in depression. GCs = glucocorticoids; NM = neuromelanin. (Single column fitting figure; color for Web only).