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Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Montanari, S; Jansen, R; Schranner, D; Kastenmüller, G; Arnold, M; Janiri, D; Sani, G; Bhattacharyya, S; Dehkordi, SM; Dunlop, BW; Rush, AJ ...
Published in: medRxiv
February 15, 2024

BACKGROUND: Acylcarnitines (ACs) are involved in bioenergetics processes that may play a role in the pathophysiology of depression. Studies linking AC levels to depression are few and provide mixed findings. We examined the association of circulating ACs levels with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) diagnosis, overall depression severity and specific symptom profiles. METHODS: The sample from the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety included participants with current (n=1035) or remitted (n=739) MDD and healthy controls (n=800). Plasma levels of four ACs (short-chain: acetylcarnitine C2 and propionylcarnitine C3; medium-chain: octanoylcarnitine C8 and decanoylcarnitine C10) were measured. Overall depression severity as well as atypical/energy-related (AES), anhedonic and melancholic symptom profiles were derived from the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology. RESULTS: As compared to healthy controls, subjects with current or remitted MDD presented similarly lower mean C2 levels (Cohen's d=0.2, p≤1e-4). Higher overall depression severity was significantly associated with higher C3 levels (ß=0.06, SE=0.02, p=1.21e-3). No associations were found for C8 and C10. Focusing on symptom profiles, only higher AES scores were linked to lower C2 (ß=-0.05, SE=0.02, p=1.85e-2) and higher C3 (ß=0.08, SE=0.02, p=3.41e-5) levels. Results were confirmed in analyses pooling data with an additional internal replication sample from the same subjects measured at 6-year follow-up (totaling 4195 observations). CONCLUSIONS: Small alterations in levels of short-chain acylcarnitine levels were related to the presence and severity of depression, especially for symptoms reflecting altered energy homeostasis. Cellular metabolic dysfunctions may represent a key pathway in depression pathophysiology potentially accessible through AC metabolism.

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medRxiv

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Publication Date

February 15, 2024

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United States
 

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Montanari, S., Jansen, R., Schranner, D., Kastenmüller, G., Arnold, M., Janiri, D., … Milaneschi, Y. (2024). Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort. MedRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.02.14.24302813
Montanari, Silvia, Rick Jansen, Daniela Schranner, Gabi Kastenmüller, Matthias Arnold, Delfina Janiri, Gabriele Sani, et al. “Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort.MedRxiv, February 15, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.02.14.24302813.
Montanari S, Jansen R, Schranner D, Kastenmüller G, Arnold M, Janiri D, et al. Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort. medRxiv. 2024 Feb 15;
Montanari, Silvia, et al. “Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort.MedRxiv, Feb. 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2024.02.14.24302813.
Montanari S, Jansen R, Schranner D, Kastenmüller G, Arnold M, Janiri D, Sani G, Bhattacharyya S, Dehkordi SM, Dunlop BW, Rush AJ, Penninx BWHJ, Kaddurah-Daouk R, Milaneschi Y. Acylcarnitines metabolism in depression: association with diagnostic status, depression severity and symptom profile in the NESDA cohort. medRxiv. 2024 Feb 15;

Published In

medRxiv

DOI

Publication Date

February 15, 2024

Location

United States