| Literature DB >> 35739089 |
Feifei Zhao1, Hongjun Tian2, Chuanjun Zhuo3,4,5,6,7,8,9, Jiayue Chen2, Qianchen Li2, Lei Yang2, Jing Ping1, Ranli Li1, Lina Wang1, Yong Xu10, Ziyao Cai1, Xueqin Song11.
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a severe mental illness, as the efficacies of current antipsychotic medications are far from satisfactory. An improved understanding of the signaling molecules involved in schizophrenia may provide novel therapeutic targets. Acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) catalyzes cellular membrane sphingomyelin into ceramide, which is further metabolized into sphingosine-1-phophate (S1P). ASM, ceramide, and S1P at the cell surface exert critical roles in the regulation of biophysical processes that include proliferation, apoptosis, and inflammation, and are thereby considered important signaling molecules. Although research on the ASM/ceramide system is still in its infancy, structural and metabolic abnormalities have been demonstrated in schizophrenia. ASM/ceramide system dysfunction is linked to the two important models of schizophrenia, the dopamine (DA) hypothesis through affecting presynaptic DA signaling, and the vulnerability-stress-inflammation model that includes the contribution of stress on the basis of genetic predisposition. In this review, we highlight the current knowledge of ASM/ceramide system dysfunction in schizophrenia gained from human and animal studies, and formulate future directions from the biological landscape for the development of new treatments. Collectively, these discoveries suggest that aberrations in the ASM/ceramide system, especially in ASM activity and levels of ceramide and S1P, may alter cerebral microdomain structure and neuronal metabolism, leading to neurotransmitter (e.g., DA) dysfunction and neuroinflammation. As such, the ASM/ceramide system may offer therapeutic targets for novel medical interventions. Normalization of the aberrant ASM/ceramide system or ceramide reduction by using approved functional inhibitors of ASM, such as fluvoxamine and rosuvastatin, may improve clinical outcomes of patients with schizophrenia. These transformative findings of the ASM/ceramide system in schizophrenia, although intriguing and exciting, may pose scientific questions and challenges that will require further studies for their resolution.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35739089 PMCID: PMC9226132 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-022-01999-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 7.989
Fig. 1Catabolic pathway of sphingomyelin to generate ceramide and subsequent sphingosine-1-phophate.
Acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) converts sphingomyelin to liberate ceramide and phosphocholine in the lysosome and on the plasma membrane. Ceramide is hydrolyzed by ceramidase to form sphingosine, which is subsequently phosphorylated by sphingosine kinase to generate sphingosine-1-phophate (S1P).
Fig. 2Hypothetical role of the acid sphingomyelinase/ceramide system in schizophrenia.
Aberrant ASM activity and abnormal ceramide and sphingomyelin levels were observed in the brain and peripheral sub-tissues (red blood cells and epidermis) of patients with schizophrenia. ASM/ceramide system dysfunction may hypothetically perturb neurotransmission in the dopamine (DA) model through the desensitization kinetics of the alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (α7nAChR), and promote inflammation by upregulating interleukin-6 production and TNF-alpha signaling in the vulnerability-stress-inflammation model of schizophrenia.