| Literature DB >> 35369081 |
Ting Liu1,2, Kunhong Deng3, Ying Xue1,2, Rui Yang1,2, Rong Yang1,2, Zhicheng Gong1,2, Mimi Tang1,2.
Abstract
Depression has become one of the most common mental diseases in the world, but the understanding of its pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatments remains insufficient. Carnitine is a natural substance that exists in organisms, which can be synthesized in vivo or supplemented by intake. Relationships of carnitine with depression, bipolar disorder and other mental diseases have been reported in different studies. Several studies show that the level of acylcarnitines (ACs) changes significantly in patients with depression compared with healthy controls while the supplementation of acetyl-L-carnitine is beneficial to the treatment of depression. In this review, we aimed to clarify the effects of ACs in depressive patients and to explore whether ACs might be the biomarkers for the diagnosis of depression and provide new ideas to treat depression.Entities:
Keywords: acylcarnitines; bipolar disorder; carnitine; depression; schizophrenia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35369081 PMCID: PMC8964433 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2022.853058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1The structural formula of L-carnitine and Acetyl-L-carnitine.
Figure 2The metabolic process of carnitine. In the presence of coenzyme A (CoA)-SH, fatty acids are catalyzed by acyl-CoA synthase in the outer mitochondrial membrane to generate acyl-CoA. Activated acyl-CoA is transported into the mitochondria under the action of acylcarnitine translocase I with the help of carnitine and carrier protein, and acylcarnitine is produced at the same time. Subsequently, acylcarnitine releases carnitine under the action of acylcarnitine translocase II to produce acyl-CoA. Finally, acyl-CoA enters the mitochondrial matrix for further oxidation.
Main information of pre-clinical researches studying the correlation between carnitine level and depression in animal.
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| Zhang et al. ( | Plasma and urine | Control: | C3:0, C4:0 | + | C3:0 and C4:0 in the overtired and depressed rats were lower than the control group. | Tail-hanging test |
| Chen et al. ( | Plasma | Control: | Carnitine and ACs (C10:1, C12:0, C14:2, C14:1, C14:0, C16:2, C16:1, C16:0, C18:2, C18:1, C18:0, C20:2, C20:1, C20:0, C14:0-OH, C16:1-OH, C16:0-OH, C18:2-OH, C18:1-OH) | + | Most medium-chain and long-chain ACs (C10:1, C12:0, C14:2, C14:1, C14:0, C16:2, C16:1, C16:0, C18:2, C18:1, C18:0, C20:2, C20:1, C20:0, C14:0-OH, C16:1-OH, C16:0-OH, C18:2-OH, C18:1-OH) increased in the depression group. After treatment, most of the ACs decreased to the normal level, except for the C18:2-OH, C18:2, C20:2, but the three ACs also showed a significant tendency to the normal level. | Tail suspension test |
| Zhao et al. ( | Plasma | Control: | LAC and carnitine | – | The concentrations of LAC and carnitine in the model group were significantly higher than those in the control group, but there was no significant difference in the concentrations of carnitine and LAC between the fluoxetine treatment group and the model group. | Sucrose consumption |
Cm:n, Carnitine, in which “m” is the number of carbon atoms, “n” is the unsaturation. -OH represents hydroxylation, such as C18:1-OH = 3-hydroxy octadecenoyl carnitine.
ACs, acylcarnitines; CUMS, chronic unpredictable mild stress; LAC, acetyl-L-carnitine.
Detailed information of studies on carnitine and depression in human.
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| Nasca et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Plasma | 20–70 | HC: | LAC, | + | The level of LAC in MDD patients was lower than healthy control, but the concentration of free carnitine had no significant difference. | HDRS-17 |
| Nie et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | Depression: 39.6 ± 18.27; HD: 42.53 ± 13.49 | Depression: | LC, LAC | + | LC and LAC were decreased in the depression group compared with healthy control. | Not mentioned |
| Liu et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Plasma | Discovery set: HC: 43.98 ± 9.79, drug-naive MDD: 42.42 ± 11.01, validation set: HC: 33.67 ± 11.09, MDD: 36.04 ± 12.53 | Discovery set: HC | ACs (C10:1, C10:2, C14:2, C14:3, C6:0, C8:0, C8:1, C10:0, C12:0, C12:1, C3:0) | – | Fifty-two identified metabolites showed significant differences between the two groups (including C10:1, C10:2, C14:2, C14:3, C6:0, C8:0, C8:1, C10:0, C12:0, C12:1, C3:0). The level of ACs decreased in MDD group compared with HC group. | DSM-IV |
| Mitro et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | >18 | Pregnant woman with antenatal depression: | C5:0 | + | C5:0 and C5:1 significantly decreased in the pregnant women with prenatal depression. | PHQ-9 |
| Ahmed et al. ( | Cohort study | Plasma | CD+: 43.1 ± 13.9; ANX+: 36.8 ± 12.3; NVSM+: 36.6 ± 14.8 | CD+: | C0, C3:0, C4:0, C5-M-DC, C5:1, C5-OH, C8:0, C10:0, C12:0, C16:1, C18:1, C18:2 | + | Free carnitine and acylcarnitines (C3:0, C4:0, C5-M-DC, C5:1) increased in the CD+ group. Free carnitine and acylcarnitines (C3:0 and C4:0) increased in the CD+ group and ANX+ group. Acylcarnitines (C8:0, C10:0, and C12:0) decreased in the CD+ group and NVSM+ group. Acylcarnitines (C5-OH, C16:1, C18:1, C18:2) decreased in all three MDD phenotypes. | HDRS-17 |
| Nie et al. ( | Cohort study | Serum | MDD: 36.92 ± 16.34; HC: 37.00 ± 15.22 | MDD: | LC, LAC | + | LC and LAC were decreased in the MDD group. After treatment, LAC and LC were increased in the effective treatment group, but no significant change in the ineffective treatment group. | HDRS-24 |
| Mahmoudiandehkordi et al. ( | Cohort study | Plasma | 40.17 ± 13.60 | MDD: | Acylcarnitines C3:0, C4:0, C5:0, C8:0, C10:0, C12:0, C14:2, C16:0, C16:1, C18:0, C18:1 and C18:2 | + | After 8 weeks of citalopram or escitalopram treatment in MDD patients, the levels of three short-chain acylcarnitines (C3:0, C4:0, and C5:0) increased, and the medium-chain and long-chain acylcarnitines (C8:0, C10:0, C12:0, C14:2, C16:0, C16:1, C18:0, C18:1, and C18:2) decreased. | HDRS-17 |
| Moaddel et al. ( | RCT | Plasma | 18–65 | Medication-free patients with treatment-resistant MDD: | C2:0 | + | C2:0 decreased less in MDD after ketamine treatment than in the placebo group. | SCID-I |
| Akaishi et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | MS:36.4 ± 3.1 | Consecutive patients with multiple sclerosis: | Free carnitine | - | The low-levels of total carnitine, free carnitine and AC were identified in MS patients and NMO patients. The correlation coefficients between the serum carnitine levels and the three self-rated questionnaires were not significant between any pairs. Six MS patients and five NMO patients with a low-level of serum carnitine were administered L-carnitine. There was no significant improvement in any questionnaire after the treatment. | QIDS-SR |
| Jones et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Plasma and urine | ME/CFS:M: 26–63, F: 21–84; Healthy: M: 20–66, F: 26–79; Depression: M: 34–71, F: 24–59; Rheumatoid arthritis: M: 43–67, F: 36–65 | ME/CFS: M = 12, F = 19 | Total carnitine | – | No significant differences in urinary total, free or esterified (acyl) carnitine between UK patients with depression group and the control group. | SIPS |
| Sarris et al. ( | RCT | Plasma | 47.6 ± 13.2 | SAMe: | Carnitine | – | There's no association between carnitine and response to SAMe or escitalopram. | SCID-I |
| Yuan et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | HC: 57.00 ± 11.51; ESRD without depression: 50.18 ± 10.65; ESRD with depression: 50.82 ± 13.45 | HC: | C3:0 | + | Acylcarnitine C3:0 was decreased in the ESRD with depression than those without depression and C3:0 had a good ability to diagnose depression in the ESRD (AUC = 0.934). | HAMD |
| Fukami et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | HD: 63.4 ± 10.0 | Male HD: | Total carnitine | + | The level of free carnitine in male HD patients were significantly lower than those in age-matched healthy male subjects. The levels of AC and the ratio of AC to free carnitine in dialysis patients were significantly higher than those in age-matched healthy subjects. | AMS |
| Tashiro et al. ( | Cohort study | Serum | HD: 61.4 ± 10.5 | HD male: | Total carnitine | + | At baseline, the levels of total carnitine and free carnitine in dialysis patients were lower than those in healthy controls, but the levels of ACs in dialysis patients were higher than that in healthy controls. The levels of free carnitine and C3:0 were significantly lower and C4:0, C5:0, C18:1-OH were higher in HD patients than in healthy subjects. L-carnitine supplementation significantly increased serum levels of free and other ACs. | SDS |
| Cassol et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Plasma | HIV-positive test cohort: 35–60, HIV-negative cohort: 35–62 | HIV-positive: | C3:0, isoC4:0, isoC5:0, 2-methyl C4:0 | + | ACs (C3:0, iso C4:0, iso C5:0, 2-methyl C4:0) were decreased to distinguish depressed subjects from controls in HIV-positive and HIV-negative cohorts. | BDI |
| Rezaee et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | 35.34 ± 8.02 | AIDs: | Carnitine | – | A non-statistically significant negative correlation between depression scores and total levels of serum carnitine was detected. No significant correlation was found between dietary carnitine intake and serum carnitine levels. | BDI |
Cm:n, Carnitine, in which “m” is the number of carbon atoms, “n” is the unsaturation. -OH represents hydroxylation, such as C18:1-OH, 3-hydroxy octadecenoyl carnitine.
AC, acylcarnitine; AIDs, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome; AMS, aging male symptoms scale; ANX+, anxious depression; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; CD+, core depression; CES-D, the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome; CGI-S, Clinical Global Improvement-severity; ChFS, Chalder fatigue scale; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; DSM-IV, the fourth Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria; ESRD, end-stage renal disease; F, female; HAMD, The Hamilton depression scale; HAMD-17, 17-item Hamilton-D Scale; HC, healthy control; HD, hemodialysis; HDRS-17, 17-item Hamilton Depression-Rating Scale; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; LAC, acetyl-L-carnitine; M, male; MDD, major depressive disorder; ME, myalgic encephalomyelitis; MS, multiple sclerosis; NMO, neuromyelitis optica; NVSM+, Neurovegetative symptoms of melancholia; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire 9; PS, performance status; QIDS-SR, self-reported quick inventory of depressive symptomatology; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SAMe, S-adenosyl methionine; SCID-I, the Structured Clinical Interview for Axis I DSM-IV Disorders-Patient Version; SDS, self-rating depression scale; SIPS, Sickness Impact Profile Score.
Main information of clinical researches studying the correlation between carnitine level and bipolar disorder.
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| Maldonado et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Dried blood spot specimens | Group A: | A: epileptic patients treated with phenytoin alone: | Carnitine and C2:0 | – | The concentration of C2:0 in BD with hyperammonemia and treated with VPA were significantly lower than epilepsy group under phenytoin treatment. Carnitine has a downward trend. | Not mentioned |
| Cuturic et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | Impatient mean age: 48.7 ± 12.2 | Schizophrenia: | Total carnitine | + | Total carnitine in outpatients was higher than psychiatric patients in emergency department. Carnitine in patients who met the criteria of metabolic syndrome was higher than patients without metabolic syndrome. No statistical difference in carnitine levels between African Americans and Caucasians patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. | Not mentioned |
Main information of clinical researches studying the correlation between carnitine level and schizophrenia.
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| Tasic et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Serum | 18–65 | Schizophrenia: | IsoC5:0 | + | Iso C5:0 exists only in schizophrenics, but not in bipolar disorder and normal subjects. | SCID-I |
| Cao et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Plasma | Schizophrenia with MetS: 41.30 ± 9.78; | Schizophrenia with MetS: | ACs (C3:0, C4:0, C5:0, C6:1, C10:1, C10:2, C14:2-OH, C16:2-OH) | + | Eight plasma ACs (C3:0, C4:0, C5:0, C6:1, C10:1, C10:2, C14:2-OH, C16:2-OH) in patients with schizophrenia and MetS were significantly higher than those in schizophrenics without MetS. | DSM-IV |
| Cao et al. ( | Cohort study | Plasma | Schizophrenics: 37.31 ± 10.85; healthy controls: 39.44 ± 9.36 | Schizophrenia: | ACs (C2:0, C3:0, C4-OH, C8:0, C10:0, C10:1, C10:2, C12:0, C12:1, C14:1, C14:1-OH, C14:2, C14:2-OH, C16:1, C16:2, C16:2-OH, and C18:0) | + | Concentrations of ACs (C4-OH and C16:1) in schizophrenia patients were significantly higher than that in healthy controls, while C3:0, C8:0, C10:0, C10:1, C10:2, C12:0, C14:1-OH, C14:2 and C14:2-OH were lower than healthy controls. After treatment, the levels of C2:0, C8:0, C10:0, C10:1, C10:2, C12:0, C12:1, C14:1, C14:1-OH, C14:2, C14:2-OH, C16:2, C16:2-OH, and C18:0 decreased compared to the control. | PANSS |
| Cao et al. ( | Cohort study | Serum | 28.91 ± 6.21 | First-episode and drug-naïve: | C18:0 | + | C18:0, L-C16:0, C18:2, and LAC were decreased after treatment. | DSM-IV |
The age was expressed as MEAN ± SD. Carnitine is expressed as Cm: n, “m” is the number of carbon atoms, “n” is the unsaturation. If carnitine is hydroxylated, you can could put a hydroxide in the end, like 3-hydroxy octadecenoyl carnitine (C18:1-OH).
AC, acylcarnitine; CRF, Case Report Form; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; GAF, The Global Assessment of Functioning Scale; HDRS-17, the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale-17; LAC, acetyl-L-carnitine; MetS, metabolic syndrome; PANSS, The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; SCID-I, The Structured Clinical Interview for Axis I; YMRS, Young Mania Rating Scale.
Figure 3Antidepressant mechanism of acetyl-L-carnitine. LAC supplement increases the expression of mGlu2 (via up-regulating transcription of GRM2) by acetylating p65 on NF-κB and H3K27. REST (repressor element 1 silencing transcription factor) and H3K27ac are enriched in the xCT promoter, promoting the expression of xCT. This in turn causes the release of glutamate out of the cell, which activates the mGlu2 receptor, and reduces the spillover of glutamate between synapses to enhance glutamate homeostasis. Meanwhile, xCT transports cystine into cells for the synthesis of glutathione to avoid oxidative stress damage. Upregulation of BDNF expression induced by LAC increases neurogenesis to exert antidepressant effects. Increase of monoamine neurotransmitters (such as 5-HT, DA, and NE) induced by LAC has demonstrated its antidepressant effect from the pathogenesis of depression. BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; DA, dopamine; GRM2, glutamate receptor metabotropic 2; H3K27ac, acetylated H3K27; 5-HT, serotonin; LAC, acetyl-L-carnitine; mGlu2, metabotropic glutamate 2; NE, norepinephrine; NMDAR, N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor; REST, repressor element silencing transcription factor; xCT: Xc-cystine/glutamate antiporter.
Changes of different acylcarnitine in mental diseases compared with healthy controls.
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| Acetylcarnitine | C2:0 | ↓ | ? |
| Propionylcarnitine | C3:0 | ↓ | ↓ |
| Butyrylcarnitine | C4:0 | ↓ | ? |
| Hydroxybutyrylcarnitine | C4:0-OH | ? | ↑ |
| Valerylcarnitine | C5:0 | ↓ | ? |
| Tiglylcarnitine | C5:1 | ↓ | ? |
| Hexanoylcarnitine | C6:0 | ? | ? |
| Hexenoylcarnitine | C6:1 | ? | ? |
| Hydroxyhexanoylcarnitine | C6:0-OH | ? | ? |
| Pimelylcarnitine | C7-DC | ? | ↑ |
| Octanoylcarnitine | C8:0 |
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| Octenoylcarnitine | C8:1 | ? | ? |
| Decanoylcarnitine | C10:0 |
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| Decenoylcarnitine | C10:1 |
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| Decadienylcarnitine | C10:2 | ? | ↓ |
| Dodecanoylcarnitine | C12:0 |
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| Dodecenoylcarnitine | C12:1 | ? | ? |
| Tetradecanoylcarnitine | C14:0 | ↑ | ? |
| Tetradecenoylcarnitine | C14:1 | ↑ | ? |
| Tetradecadienylcarnitine | C14:2 |
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| Tetradecatrienecarnitine | C14:3 | ? | ? |
| Hydroxytetradecanoylcarnitine | C14:0-OH | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxytetradecenoylcarnitine | C14:1-OH | ? | ↓ |
| Hydroxytetradecadienylcarnitine | C14:2-OH | ? | ↓ |
| Hexadecanoylcarnitine | C16:0 | ↑ | ? |
| Hexadecenoylcarnitine | C16:1 | ↑ | ↑ |
| Hexadecadienylcarnitine | C16:2 | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxyhexadecanoylcarnitine | C16:0-OH | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxyhexadecenoylcarnitine | C16:1-OH | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxyhexadecadienylcarnitine | C16:2-OH | ? | ? |
| Octadecanoylcarnitine | C18:0 | ↑ | ? |
| Octadecenoylcarnitine | C18:1 | ↑ | ? |
| Octadecadienylcarnitine | C18:2 | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxyoctadecenoylcarnitine | C18:1-OH | ↑ | ? |
| Hydroxyoctadecadienoylcarnitine | C18:2-OH | ↑ | ? |
| Eicosylcarnitine | C20:0 | ↑ | ? |
| Eicosaenoylcarnitine | C20:1 | ↑ | ? |
| Eicosadienoylcarnitine | C20:2 | ↑ | ? |