| Literature DB >> 34072767 |
Ferenc Zádor1, Sâmia Joca2, Gábor Nagy-Grócz3,4, Szabolcs Dvorácskó1,5, Edina Szűcs1,6, Csaba Tömböly1, Sándor Benyhe1, László Vécsei4,7,8.
Abstract
Substance use/abuse is one of the main causes of depressive symptoms. Cannabis and synthetic cannabinoids in particular gained significant popularity in the past years. There is an increasing amount of clinical data associating such compounds with the inflammatory component of depression, indicated by the up-regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Pro-inflammatory cytokines are also well-known to regulate the enzymes of the kynurenine pathway (KP), which is responsible for metabolizing tryptophan, a precursor in serotonin synthesis. Enhanced pro-inflammatory cytokine levels may over-activate the KP, leading to tryptophan depletion and reduced serotonin levels, which can subsequently precipitate depressive symptoms. Therefore, such mechanism might represent a possible link between the endocannabinoid system (ECS) and the KP in depression, via the inflammatory and dysregulated serotonergic component of the disorder. This review will summarize the data regarding those natural and synthetic cannabinoids that increase pro-inflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, the data on such cytokines associated with KP activation will be further reviewed accordingly. The interaction of the ECS and the KP has been postulated and demonstrated in some studies previously. This review will further contribute to this yet less explored connection and propose the KP to be the missing link between cannabinoid-induced inflammation and depressive symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: cannabis; depression; endocannabinoid system; kynurenine pathway; kynurenines; pro-inflammatory cytokines; synthetic cannabinoids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34072767 PMCID: PMC8199129 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The tryptophan metabolic pathway including the kynurenine (yellow) and partly the serotonin pathway (blue). Pro-inflammatory cytokines discussed in this review which upregulate (highlighted by “+”) the different enzymes are also indicated in red. For further information, see Section 4 and Table 2. Metabolites and enzymes of the pathways are shown in bold and italic, respectively. The dashed lines in the serotonin pathway indicates the further continuation of the pathway, which is not discussed here. Abbreviations: AADC: aromatic acid decarboxylase enzymes; HAAH: 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid hydroxylase; HAAO: 3-hydroxyanthranillic acid 3,4-dioxygenase; IDO: indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; KATs: kynurenine aminotransferases; KMO: kynurenine 3-monooxygenase; KYNU: kynureninase; QPRT: quinolinic acid phosphoribosyltransferase; TDO: tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase; TPH: tryptophan hydroxylase.
Figure 2Summary of the reviewed data and their proposed connections between exogenous cannabinoids, pro-inflammatory cytokines, KP, and depression as discussed in the sections below and in Table 1 and Table 2. Abbreviations: IDO: indolamine 2,3-dioxygenase; IFNγ: interferon γ; IL: interleukin; KMO: kynurenine 3-monooxygenase, KYN: l-kynurenine, KYNA: kynurenic acid; QUIN: quinolinic acid; THC: ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol; TNFα: tumor necrosis factor α; Trp: tryptophan; SRT: serotonin.
Summary of cannabinoids known to increase pro-inflammatory cytokines.
| Cannabinoid | Cytokine | Studied Sample | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| THC | IFNγ | PMBC | [ |
| TNFα | PMBC | [ | |
| Adult mouse peripheral macrophage | [ | ||
| Adult mouse hippocampus and hypothalamus | [ | ||
| Female adol. rat microglia PFC | [ | ||
| IL-1 | Microglia | [ | |
| Adult mouse peripheral macrophage | [ | ||
| Adult mouse hippocampus and hypothalamus | [ | ||
| IL-6 | PMBC | [ | |
| IL-8 | Eosinophilic leukemia cell line and HTLV-1 positive B cell line | [ | |
| CBD | IFNγ | PMBC | [ |
| IL-8 | Eosinophilic leukemia cell line | [ | |
| Cannabis | IL-1, IL-6, IL-8 | Serum from patients with CUD | [ |
| CP55940 | TNFα | HL-60 transfected with CB2R; mouse lung | [ |
| IL-1 | Mouse lung | [ | |
| IL-6 | Mouse lung | [ | |
| NMSC | IL-1β, IL-6 | RAW264.7 macrophage | [ |
| CP-47497-C8 | TNFα, IL-6 | PMBC | [ |
| HU308 | IL-6 | Human primary leukocytes | [ |
| Rimonabant | TNFα | rat hippocampus | [ |
| IL-6 | rat mPFC | [ |
CUD: cannabis used disorder; HTVL-1: human T-lymphotropic virus type 1; PFC: prefrontal cortex; PMBC: peripheral mononuclear cells; mPFC: medial prefrontal cortex; NMSC: 2-(methylsulfonamido)ethyl cannabidiolate.
Summarizing the data regarding upregulated pro-inflammatory cytokines associated with altered KP enzymes or metabolites.
| Cytokine | KP Enzyme or Metabolite | Studied Sample | Comment | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFNγ | IDO mRNA ↑ | mouse hippocampus | galectin-9 synergism | [ |
| mouse hippocampus | dexamethasone, corticosterone and aldosterone synergism | [ | ||
| rat cortex | CMS model | [ | ||
| KAT II mRNA ↓ | rat cortex | CMS model | [ | |
| KYN, 3-HK, KYNA ↑ | mouse plasma | CSD model | [ | |
| IL-1 | IDO mRNA ↑ | primary macrophage | [ | |
| IDO activity ↑ | THP1 monocytic leukemia cell line | IFNγ pretreatment | [ | |
| IDO, KMO mRNA ↑ | CX3CR1 K.O. mouse microglia | [ | ||
| KMO mRNA ↑ | mouse microglia | BCG model | [ | |
| IDO, KMO mRNA ↑ | murine microglia | LPS-induction | [ | |
| KMO mRNA ↑ | mouse brain | nerve injury-induced depression | [ | |
| IDO, KMO, KYNU mRNA, | human hippocampal progenitor cells | [ | ||
| IDO1 mRNA ↑ | rat hippocampus | coexisting chronic temporal lobe epilepsy and depressive behavior | [ | |
| IDO, KMO and KYNU activity ↑ | mouse hippocampus | HMGB1 induced depressive like behavior model | [ | |
| IL-6 | Trp ↓ | human serum | in patients with depression | [ |
| KYN ↑ | female human serum | in early puerperium associated with anxiety and depression | [ | |
| QUIN/KYNA ratio ↑ | human plasma | in patients with unipolar treatment-resistant depression | [ | |
| KYN and QUIN ↑ | human plasma | did not mediate the correlation between cytokines and depressed mood | [ | |
| QUIN ↑ | female human plasma | women with PPD | [ | |
| KYN/Trp ratio, KYN ↑ | plasma from frailty patients | may explain high prevalence depression in frailty patients | [ | |
| QUIN ↑ KYNA ↓ | human CSF | in suicide attempters | [ | |
| IDO1, KMO mRNA ↑ | murine microglia | following LPS-stimulation | [ | |
| IDO1 protein ↑ | rat hippocampus | through JAK/STAT pathway | [ | |
| IDO1 mRNA ↑ | rat hippocampus | coexisting chronic temporal lobe epilepsy and depressive behavior | [ | |
| IDO1 protein ↑ | rat hippocampus | ovariectomy-induced depression model | [ | |
| IDO, KMO mRNA ↑ | rat hpc., ctx., and cultured glia cells | [ | ||
| IL-8 | KYN/Trp quotient ↑ | human plasma | IFNα-induced depressive symptoms | [ |
| female human serum | in early puerperium associated with anxiety and depression | [ | ||
| TNFα | IDO ↑ | human serum | in MDD patients | [ |
| KYN, 3-HK, KYNA ↑ | mouse plasma | CSD mouse model | [ | |
| KYN and QUIN ↑ | human plasma | did not mediate the correlation between cytokines and depressed mood | [ | |
| QUIN ↑ | female human plasma | women with PPD | [ | |
| KYN, KYN/Trp ratio ↑ | plasma | associated with enhanced depression, anhedonia, and treatment nonresponse | [ | |
| KYN, KYNA, QUIN ↑ | CSF | in unmedicated depressed patients | [ | |
| KYN/Trp ratio, KYN ↑ | plasma from frailty patients | may explain high prevalence depression in frailty patients | [ | |
| IDO, HAAO mRNA ↑ | mouse brain | BCG model | [ | |
| IDO activity ↑ | mouse microglia cells | BCG model | [ | |
| IDO, KMO mRNA ↑ | rat hpc., ctx., and cultured glia cells | [ | ||
| IDO1, KMO mRNA ↑ | murine microglia | following LPS-stimulation | [ | |
| IDO, KMO and KYNU activity ↑ | mouse hippocampus | HMGB1 induced depressive like behavior model | [ |
↑: increase; ↓: decrease; BCG: Bacille Calmette Guérin mice model of depression; CMS: chronic mild stress model; ctx.: cortex; CSD: chronic social defeat model; HMGB1: high mobility group box-1 protein; hpc.: hippocampus; MDD: major depressive disorder; PPD: peripartum onset depression.