| Literature DB >> 30367065 |
Tongtong Ge1, Jie Fan1, Wei Yang1, Ranji Cui2, Bingjin Li3.
Abstract
Leptin, produced and secreted by white adipose tissue, plays a critical role in regulating body weight, food intake, and energy metabolism. Recently, several studies have identified an underlying role for leptin in regulation of mood and cognition via regulation of synaptic changes in the brain that have been associated with antidepressant-like actions. Brain neural plasticity occurs in response to a range of intrinsic and extrinsic stimuli, including those that may mediate the effects of antidepressants. Neural plasticity theories of depression are thought to explain multiple aspects of depression and the effects of antidepressants. It is also well documented that leptin has effects on neural plasticity. This review summarizes the recent literature on the role of leptin in neural plasticity in order to elaborate the possible mechanism of leptin's antidepressant-like effects. Recent findings provide new insights into the underlying mechanisms of neural plasticity in depression. Leptin may influence these mechanisms and consequently constitute a possible target for novel therapeutic approaches to the treatment of depression.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30367065 PMCID: PMC6203758 DOI: 10.1038/s41419-018-1129-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Overview of measurements of leptin function in depression
| Subjects | Sex (F/M), | BMI | Assessment | Source and assay | Main findings | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 301/196, 60.6 | 25.1 ± 4.5 | DSM-IV | Fasting blood; ELISA | Higher leptin was associated with the atypical MDD subtype both for remitted and current patients |
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| Remitted MDD | 480/231, 71.0 | 25.8 ± 4.9 | ||||
| Current MDD | 754/308, 67.5 | 25.8 ± 5.3 | ||||
| Control | 16/26 | 25.61 ± 3.50 | HDRS | Fasting serum, ElISA | Higher leptin was found in patients with ADD than in controls, but not in patients with DD-NA |
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| ADD | 16/26 | 26.36 ± 4.17 | ||||
| DD-NA | 20/31 | 24.41 ± 3.43 | ||||
| Minimal to no depression | 60 | 29 ± 7 | BDI-II scores 0–13 | Fasting serum, ElISA | Leptin levels increased with the increasing BDI-II score; participants with moderate to severe depression had the highest levels of leptin |
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| Mild depression | 67 | 31 ± 9 | 14–19 | |||
| Moderate to severe depression | 63 | 33 ± 8 | 20–28 | |||
| Control | 44 | 24.2 ± 3.7 | DSM-IV | Fasting plasma, ELISA | Women with melancholic depression had higher leptin levels than controls; no changes were observed between undifferentiated or atypical patients and controls |
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| Undifferentiated | 22 | 27.2 ± 6.2 | ||||
| Atypical | 16 | 28.9 ± 7.1 | ||||
| Melancholic | 51 | 25.8 ± 6.0 | ||||
| Control | 26/25 | 16.9 ± 2.0 | DSM-IV,BDI,BPRS | Fasting plasma, ELISA | Lower leptin and cholesterol levels in patients with MMD than controls. |
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| Schizophrenia | 39/39 | 24.1 ± 2.8 | ||||
| MMD | 35/34 | 20.6 ± 2.7 | ||||
| Healthy | 9 | 23.43 ± 3.33 | DSM-IV | Fasting serum, ElISA | Women had higher leptin levels than men in both depressive and healthy subjects; female patients had significantly higher leptin levels compared to the control females both before and after the treatment |
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| Healthy female | 14 | 26.13 ± 2.56 | ||||
| Male MMD patients | 12 | 23.92 ± 3.58 | ||||
| Female MMD patients | 20 | 26.74 ± 4.88 | ||||
| Control | 69/34, 67 | 26.0 ± 5.5 | DSM-IV | Fasting serum, ElISA | Patients with BD present lower leptin levels than those with MD and the control group. |
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| Current depression | 69/34, 67 | 26.5 ± 4.9 |
MDD major depressive disorder, ADD depressive disorder with atypical features, DD-NA depressive disorder without atypical features, UD unipolar depression, BD bipolar depression
Overview of Leptin’s effect on depression in experimental models
| Model | Behavioral assessment | Main findings | Mechanism | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CUS rats CSDS rats | FST | CUS rats and CSDS rats displayed low leptin levels in plasma. Systemic leptin administration reversed the CUS-induced hedonic-like deficit and improved behavioral despair dose-dependently |
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| CSDS mice | EPM, FST | Stressed mice have lower serum leptin levels than controls. CSDS mice displayed central leptin resistance; administration of a melanocortin agonist worsens stress-induced behavioral deficits, while mice lacking the melanocortin 4-receptor display attenuated symptoms | β3-adrenergic receptors |
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| Lep (ob/ob) mice LepTg mice DIO mice | FST, SPT | Excess leptin reversed depression-like behaviors; leptin failed to induce an antidepressant action or alter c-Fos expression in the hippocampus of DIO mice, but significantly increased hippocampal BDNF concentrations in CD mice | TrkB/BDNF signaling pathway in hippocampus |
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| LeprDAT-Cre mice (LepRb was selectively deleted in dopamine neurons.) | SPT, FST, TST | LeprDAT-Cre mice displayed an anxiogenic-like phenotype, while depression-like behaviors were not affected; microinjection of the D1 antagonist SCH23390 into the CeA attenuated the anxiogenic phenotype | DA signalings in midbrain |
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| CUS rats | OFT, SPT, FST | Leptin administration reversed the CUS-induced reduction of hippocampal neurogenesis and depression-like behaviors; leptin increased β-catenin and reversed the inhibitory effects of dexamethasone on β-catenin | GSK-3β/β-catenin signaling-dependent neurogenesis |
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| LepRb cKO mice (LepRb was ablated in glutamatergic neurons of forebrain) | FST, TST, RT, SPT, LHT, Hot-plate test, EPM, OFT, LDT | Lepr cKO mice displayed depression-like behavioral deficits loss of Lepr in forebrain glutamatergic neurons facilitated NMDA-induced hippocampal LTD | NMDA-mediated LTD |
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| LepRb (db/db) mice | SPT, FST, TST, LA | LepRb (db/db) displayed resistance to treatment with either fluoxetine or desipramine; fluoxetine failed to stimulate phosphorylation of Akt(Thr308) and GSK-3β(Ser9) in the hippocampus and PFC of db/db mice | Akt/GSK signaling |
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| LepRb (db/db) mice | SPT, FST, TST, OFT | LepRb (db/db) mice displayed depression-like behaviors; STAT3 activity and phosphorylation at Tyr 705 were decreased by LepRb KO, which did not involve iIKKb/NFjB signaling | STAT3/SOCS3 signaling |
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CSDS chronic social defeat stress, CUS chronic unpredictable stress, LA locomotor activity, TST tail suspension test, FST forced swim test, SPT saccharin preference test, LHT learned helplessness test, EPM elevated plus-maze, OFT open-field test, LDT light dark test, RT rotarod test, LepTg mice (transgenic skinny mice overexpressing leptin in the liver), LTD long-term depression, DIO diet-induced obesity
Fig. 1Leptin’s effect on hippocampal synaptic plasticity.
Activation of LepRb can trigger PI3K/Akt and AMPK/Akt signaling. Both pathways can subsequently inhibit GSK3β activity. PI3K stimulation can enhance NMDA-dependent LTD and stimulate AMPA receptor exocytosis, which contributes to potentiation of excitatory synaptic transmission. Another critical event is mTOR activation, which promotes a synthesis of synaptic protein synthesis and synaptogenesis
Fig. 2Leptin activates multiple signaling pathways that potentiate neuroprotection, cell survival, and proliferation.
Leptin binds to LepRb and activates the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. Activating LepRb also stimulates the MAPK-signaling pathway. Both pathways promote neuroprotection, cell survival, and proliferation. The stimulation of PI3K/Akt decreases GSK-3β activity by phosphorylating GSK-3, promoting the expression of cell proliferation genes. Activation of the LepRb leads to CREB phosphorylation and initiation of CREB-dependent transcription, which also enhances cell proliferation genes. CREB cAMP response element-binding protein