4.5 Article

Protective effects of antidepressant citalopram against abnormal APP processing and amyloid beta-induced mitochondrial dynamics, biogenesis, mitophagy and synaptic toxicities in Alzheimer's disease

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 30, Issue 10, Pages 847-864

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddab054

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Association New Investigator Research Grant [2016-NIRG-39787]
  2. Center of Excellence for Translational Neuroscience and Therapeutics [PN-CTNT20115-AR]
  3. Alzheimer's Association through a SAGA grant
  4. NIH [R01AG042178, R01AG47812, R01NS105473, AG069333, AG066347]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that citalopram has a protective effect against mutant APP, Aβ, and mitochondrial toxicities, suggesting a potential neuroprotective role in patients with depression, anxiety, and AD.
The purpose of this study is to study the neuroprotective role of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), citalopram, against Alzheimer's disease (AD). Multiple SSRIs, including citalopram, are reported to treat patients with depression, anxiety and AD. However, their protective cellular mechanisms have not been studied completely. In the current study, we investigated the protective role of citalopram against impaired mitochondrial dynamics, defective mitochondrial biogenesis, defective mitophagy and synaptic dysfunction in immortalized mouse primary hippocampal cells (HT22) expressing mutant APP (SWI/IND) mutations. Using quantitative RT-PCR, immunoblotting, biochemical methods and transmission electron microscopy methods, we assessed mutant full-length APP/C-terminal fragments and Po levels and mRNA and protein levels of mitochondrial dynamics, biogenesis, mitophagy and synaptic genes in mAPP-HT22 cells and mAPP-HT22 cells treated with citalopram. Increased levels of mRNA levels of mitochondrial fission genes, decreased levels of fusion biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy and synaptic genes were found in mAPP-HT22 cells relative to WT-HT22 cells. However, mAPP-HT22 cells treated with citalopram compared to mAPP-HT22 cells revealed reduced levels of the mitochondrial fission genes, increased fusion, biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy and synaptic genes. Our protein data agree with mRNA levels. Transmission electron microscopy revealed significantly increased mitochondrial numbers and reduced mitochondrial length in mAPP-HT22 cells; these were reversed in citalopram-treated mAPP-HT22 cells. Cell survival rates were increased in citalopram-treated mAPP-HT22 relative to citalopram-untreated mAPP-HT22. Further, mAPP and C-terminal fragments were also reduced in citalopram-treated cells. These findings suggest that citalopram reduces mutant APP and A beta and mitochondrial toxicities and may have a protective role of mutant APP and A beta-induced injuries in patients with depression, anxiety and AD.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available