| Literature DB >> 34518514 |
Gwenn S Smith1,2, Clifford I Workman3, Hillary Protas4, Yi Su4, Alena Savonenko5, Hiroto Kuwabara6, Neda F Gould3, Michael Kraut7, Jin Hui Joo3, Ayon Nandi6, Dimitri Avramopoulos8, Eric M Reiman4, Kewei Chen4.
Abstract
Depression in late-life is associated with increased risk of cognitive decline and development of all-cause dementia. The neurobiology of late-life depression (LLD) may involve both neurochemical and neurodegenerative mechanisms that are common to depression and dementia. Transgenic amyloid mouse models show evidence of early degeneration of monoamine systems. Informed by these preclinical data, the hypotheses were tested that a spatial covariance pattern of higher beta-amyloid (Aβ) and lower serotonin transporter availability (5-HTT) in frontal, temporal, and parietal cortical regions would distinguish LLD patients from healthy controls and the expression of this pattern would be associated with greater depressive symptoms. Twenty un-medicated LLD patients who met DSM-V criteria for major depression and 20 healthy controls underwent PET imaging with radiotracers for Aβ ([11C]-PiB) and 5-HTT ([11C]-DASB). A voxel-based multi-modal partial least squares (mmPLS) algorithm was applied to the parametric PET images to determine the spatial covariance pattern between the two radiotracers. A spatial covariance pattern was identified, including higher Aβ in temporal, parietal and occipital cortices associated with lower 5-HTT in putamen, thalamus, amygdala, hippocampus and raphe nuclei (dorsal, medial and pontine), which distinguished LLD patients from controls. Greater expression of this pattern, reflected in summary 5-HTT/Aβ mmPLS subject scores, was associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms. The mmPLS method is a powerful approach to evaluate the synaptic changes associated with AD pathology. This spatial covariance pattern should be evaluated further to determine whether it represents a biological marker of antidepressant treatment response and/or cognitive decline in LLD patients.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34518514 PMCID: PMC8437937 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01539-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the late-life depressed (LLD) patients and controls.
| Healthy controls ( | LLD Patients ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 65 ± 7 | 67 ± 6 |
| Sex (F/M) | 10/10 | 10/10 |
| Education (years) | 15.5 ± 4 | 16.5 ± 2 |
| MMSE | 29 ± 1 | 29 ± 1 |
| HDRS | 1 ± 1 | 18 ± 2a |
| BDI | 2 ± 3 | 24 ± 8b |
MMSE modified Mini-Mental State Examination, BDI Beck Depression Inventory, HDRS Hamilton Depression Rating Scale.
aSignificant between group difference (F(1,39) = 879.3, P < 0.001).
bSignificant between group difference (F(1,39) = 149.4, P < 0.001).
Fig. 1Voxel-wise, statistical parametric mapping (version 12) unimodal analysis for [11C]-PiB and [11C]-DASB, separately.
Higher beta-amyloid (left, hot colored areas) and lower serotonin transporter availability (right, cool colored areas) was observed in Late-Life Depressed (LLD) Patients than in normal controls, applying the Monte-Carlo Simulation Method (uncorrected P = 0.005).
Peak voxel locations identified by statistical parametric mapping (version 12) unimodal analysis.
| Brain region | Hemisphere | Atlas coordinates millimeters (MNI) X Y Z | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greater beta-amyloid burden in LLD patients compared to controls | |||
| Middle Frontal Gyrus | Left | −28 50 36 | 9.0E–04 |
| Superior Parietal Gyrus | Left | −26 −74 56 | 5.4E–04 |
| Precuneus | Left | −4 −80 56 | 1.3E–03 |
| Inferior Parietal Gyrus | Left | −26 −72 44 | 3.3E–04 |
| Angular Gyrus | Left | −40 −72 48 | 4.9E–04 |
| Superior Occipital Gyrus | Left | −26 −72 40 | 4.0E–04 |
| Lower 5-HTT in LLD patients compared to controls | |||
| Parahippocampal Gyrus | Right | 28 −28 −32 | 2.1E–05 |
| Superior Temporal Pole | Left | −48 14 −24 | 7.6E–05 |
| Inferior Temporal Gyrus | Right | 32 2 −44 | 1.8E–04 |
| Amygdala | Right | 30 −6 −14 | 4.02E–04 |
| Amygdala | Left | −26 2 −26 | 1.9E–03 |
| Fusiform Gyrus | Right | 30 −12 −36 | 1.3E–05 |
| Fusiform Gyrus | Left | −28 −12 −32 | 1.8E–04 |
| Raphe Pontine | −6 −18 −20 | 6.3E–03 | |
| Raphe Median | 0 −30 −24 | 1.3E–02 | |
| Raphe Dorsal | 4 −28 −12 | 3.4E–02 | |
Higher Beta-Amyloid (top section) and lower serotonin transporter availability (bottom section) was observed in Late-Life Depressed (LLD) Patients than normal controls, applying the Monte-Carlo Simulation Method (uncorrected P = 0.005).
Fig. 2Subject scores for normal controls (NC) and late-life depressed (PT) patients.
Subject scores determined by multi-modal partial least squares.
Fig. 3Co-varying spatial patterns between beta-amyloid deposition and serotonin transporter availability.
Covarying Spatial patterns determined by Multi-Modal Partial Least Squares in normal controls and late-lifedepressed patients.
The peak voxel locations of the co-varying spatial patterns of Greater Beta-Amyloid and the Serotonin Transporter (5-HTT) determined by multi-modal Partial Least Squares (mmPLS) for the Normal Controls and Late-Life Depressed Patient Groups.
| Brain region | Hemisphere | Atlas coordinates millimeters(MNI) X Y Z | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greater beta-amyloid in LLD patients compared to controls | |||
| Inferior Temporal Gyrus | Left | −58 −54 −24 | 2.0E–05 |
| Precuneus | Right | 6 −78 52 | 7.1E–06 |
| Precuneus | Right | 6 −78 56 | 2.2E–05 |
| Inferior Parietal Gyrus | Left | −32 −68 44 | 8.6E–04 |
| Superior Occipital Gyrus | Right | 22 −78 40 | 1.5E–07 |
| Cuneus | Right | 14 −76 36 | 7.8E–06 |
| Lower 5-HTT in LLD patients compared to controls | |||
| Putamen | Right | 26 −4 −4 | 5.6E–05 |
| Putamen | Left | −22 12 −4 | 3.7E–05 |
| Thalamus | Right | 14 −28 0 | 9.0E–09 |
| Thalamus | Left | −12 −28 4 | 1.4E–05 |
| Amygdala | Right | 28 −6 −14 | 2.4E–04 |
| Amygdala | Left | −26 −8 −12 | 7.7E–05 |
| Hippocampus | Left | −26 −8 −16 | 3.1E–04 |
| Pontine Raphe | −2 −26 −20 | 3.1E–07 | |
| Dorsal Raphe | 0 −28 −14 | 8.2E–18 | |
| Median Raphe | 0 −30 −20 | 1.6E–09 | |
Correlation between multi-modal partial least squares (mmPLS) determined subject scores and depression severity.
| Integrated | Beta-amyloid | Serotonin transporter availability | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression Measure | Rs | Rs | Rs | |||
| Hamilton Depression Rating Scale | 0.43 | 0.006 | 0.50 | 0.001 | 0.35 | 0.03 |
| Beck Depression Inventory | 0.44 | 0.005 | 0.45 | 0.003 | 0.42 | 0.007 |