Researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have discovered that a change in the location of a protein in the brain could serve as a biomarker for depression, allowing a simple, rapid, laboratory test to identify patients with depression and to determine whether a particular antidepressant therapy will provide a successful response.

The research is published in the March 12 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

"This test could serve to predict the efficacy of antidepressant therapy quickly, within four to five days, sparing patients the agony of waiting a month or more to find out if they are on the correct therapeutic regimen," said Mark Rasenick, UIC distinguished university professor of physiology and biophysics and psychiatry.

Despite decades of research, the biological basis of depression is unknown, and the molecular and cellular targets of antidepressant treatment remain elusive, although it is likely that these drugs have one or more primary targets.

Rasenick said the discovery could help millions who suffer from undiagnosed depression or receive unsuccessful treatment.

"We discovered that in depressed individuals a signaling protein is located in specific areas of the cell membrane called lipid rafts," he said. This protein, called Gs alpha, activates adenylyl cyclase, a link in signal transduction, and is responsible for the action of neurotransmitters such as serotonin.

"These 'rafts' are thick, viscous, almost gluey areas, that either facilitate or impede communication between membrane molecules," Rasenick said. "When Gs alpha is caught in these lipid raft domains, its ability to couple with and activate adenylyl cyclase is markedly reduced. Antidepressants help to move the Gs alpha out of these rafts and facilitate the action of certain neurotransmitters."

Previous research in both rats and cultured brain cells by Rasenick and his colleagues, as well as others, has shown that Gs alpha changed its location in response to antidepressants, moving out of the lipid rafts to areas of the membrane that allow more efficient communication among membrane components responsible for neurotransmitter action. Further, antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs have been shown to concentrate in these lipid rafts.

"This new study shows that in depressed humans, Gs alpha protein is confined in lipid rafts, where it's less likely to mediate the action of neurotransmitters, and that antidepressants have the opposite effect," Rasenick said.

"In simple language -- we may be able to tell you if you are depressed and more importantly, whether you are responding to the chosen antidepressant therapy."

The new study may also explain why antidepressants take so long to work and why chemically dissimilar compounds have similar effects.

In their study, Rasenick and colleagues compared brain samples from depressed people who had committed suicide with controls who had no history of psychiatric disorders. They found that while the total amount of Gs alpha was the same in the depressed and non-depressed, the depressed have a greater proportion of Gs alpha confined to lipid rafts. The localization of other G proteins was not different.

Rasenick and his colleagues have begun further studies to confirm and expand these findings.

###

The study was supported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

Robert Donati, Yogesh Dwivedi and Ghanshyam Pandey from UIC College of Medicine and Rosalinda Roberts and Robert Conley from the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center in Baltimore contributed to this study. Donati is also on the faculty of the Illinois College of Optometry.

UIC ranks among the nation's top 50 universities in federal research funding and is Chicago's largest university with 25,000 students, 12,000 faculty and staff, 15 colleges and the state's major public medical center. A hallmark of the campus is the Great Cities Commitment, through which UIC faculty, students and staff engage with community, corporate, foundation and government partners in hundreds of programs to improve the quality of life in metropolitan areas around the world.

For more information about UIC, visit uic.edu/.

Source: Jeanne Galatzer-Levy

Tag Cloud

Buy Actonel Without Prescription
Buy Adefovir Without Prescription
Buy Allopurinol Without Prescription
Buy Antabuse Without Prescription
Buy Arava Without Prescription
Buy Armour Without Prescription
Buy Atarax Without Prescription
Buy Azathioprine Without Prescription
Buy Bayer ASA Aspirin Without Prescription
Buy CellCept Without Prescription
Buy Colchicine Without Prescription
Buy Cyklokapron Without Prescription
Buy Cystone Without Prescription
Buy Detrol Without Prescription
Buy Dexamethasone Without Prescription
Buy Diamox Without Prescription
Buy Diltiazem Cream Without Prescription
Buy Ditropan Without Prescription
Buy Epogen Without Prescription
Buy Fosamax Without Prescription
Buy HIV Test Without Prescription
Buy Human Growth Hormone Without Prescription
Buy Kenalog Without Prescription
Buy Meclizine Without Prescription
Buy Mestinon Without Prescription
Buy Motilium Without Prescription
Buy Naltrexone Without Prescription
Buy Nimotop Without Prescription
Buy Persantine Without Prescription
Buy Potassium Citrate Without Prescription
Buy Prednisolone Without Prescription
Buy Probenecid Without Prescription
Buy Prograf Without Prescription
Buy Pyridium Without Prescription
Buy Reglan Without Prescription
Buy Rocaltrol Without Prescription
Buy Rogaine Without Prescription
Buy Synthroid Without Prescription
Buy Triamcinolone Without Prescription
Buy Urispas Without Prescription
Buy Urivoid Without Prescription
Buy Ursodiol Without Prescription
Buy Vasodilan Without Prescription
Buy Vesicare Without Prescription
Buy Zofran Without Prescription
Buy Anti Flu Face Mask Without Prescription
Buy Anti-Bacterial Face Mask Without Prescription
Buy Atripla Without Prescription
Buy Combivir Without Prescription
Buy Didanosine Without Prescription
Buy Epivir Without Prescription
Buy Famvir Without Prescription
Buy Nevirapine Without Prescription
Buy Retrovir Without Prescription
Buy Ribavirin Without Prescription
Buy Stavudine Without Prescription
Buy Sustiva Without Prescription
Buy Truvada Without Prescription
Buy Valtrex Without Prescription
Buy Zovirax Without Prescription