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The two-cell model of glucose metabolism: a hypothesis of schizophrenia

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 1738-1747

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-00980-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder affecting over 20 million people worldwide. Research suggests disturbances in glucose metabolism may be a potential mechanism for the disease, and a 'two-cell' model of glucose metabolism has been developed to explain treatment effects. The model challenges established concepts and suggests schizophrenia can be formulated in two steps involving dysregulation of glucose signaling pathways.
Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe mental disorder that affects over 20 million people worldwide. Common symptoms include distortions in thinking, perception, emotions, language, and self awareness. Different hypotheses have been proposed to explain the development of schizophrenia, however, there are no unifying features between the proposed hypotheses. Schizophrenic patients have perturbed levels of glucose in their cerebrospinal fluid, indicating a disturbance in glucose metabolism. We have explored the possibility that disturbances in glucose metabolism can be a general mechanism for predisposition and manifestation of the disease. We discuss glucose metabolism as a network of signaling pathways. Glucose and glucose metabolites can have diverse actions as signaling molecules, such as regulation of transcription factors, hormone and cytokine secretion and activation of neuronal cells, such as microglia. The presented model challenges well-established concepts in enzyme kinetics and glucose metabolism. We have developed a 'two-cell' model of glucose metabolism, which can explain the effects of electroconvulsive therapy and the beneficial and side effects of olanzapine treatment. Arrangement of glycolytic enzymes into metabolic signaling complexes within the 'two hit' hypothesis, allows schizophrenia to be formulated in two steps. The 'first hit' is the dysregulation of the glucose signaling pathway. This dysregulation of glucose metabolism primes the central nervous system for a pathological response to a 'second hit' via the astrocytic glycogenolysis signaling pathway.

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