4.7 Article

Cortical biometals: Changed levels in suicide and with mood disorders

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 243, Issue -, Pages 539-544

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2018.09.026

Keywords

Cortex; Metallomics; Bipolar disorders; Major depressive disorders; Cobalt; Cadmium

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council [1025774, 566967, 1002240]
  2. CRC for Mental Health, One in Five

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Background: Changes in levels of metals have been suggested to contribute to the pathophysiologies of several neurodegenerative disorders but to our knowledge this is the first metallomic study in CNS from patients with mood disorders. The focus of this study was on cortical regions affected by the pathophysiologies of bipolar disorders and major depressive disorders. Methods: Levels of metals were measured using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry in Brodmann's areas (BA) 6, 10 and 17 from patients with major depressive disorders (n = 13), bipolar disorders (n = 12) and age / sex matched controls (n = 13). Results: There were lower levels of cortical strontium (BA 6 & 10), ruthenium (BA 6 & 17) and cadmium (BA 10) from patients with major depressive disorder as well as lower levels of strontium in BA 10 from patients with bipolar disorders. Unexpectedly, there were changes in levels of 16 metals in the cortex, mainly BA 6, from suicide completers compared to those who died of other causes. Limitations: Cohort sizes were relatively small but comparable with many studies using human postmortem CNS. Like all studies on non-treatment naive patients, drug treatment was a potential confound in our experiments. Conclusions: Our exploratory study suggests changes in levels of metals in bipolar disorders and major depressive disorders could be affecting cortical oxidative balance in patients with mood disorders. Our data raises the possibility that measuring levels of specific biometals in the blood could be used as a biomarker for increased risk of suicide.

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