4.5 Article

MMP9 mRNA is a potential diagnostic and treatment monitoring marker for PTSD: Evidence from mice and humans

Journal

EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue -, Pages 20-32

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2021.04.014

Keywords

Post-traumatic stress disorder; Trier Social Stress Test (TSST); Dexamethasone suppression test; Mouse model of PTSD; PTSD biomarkers; exposure therapy

Funding

  1. Private Horst Kubler Foundation, Munchen, Germany

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This study found that blood MMP9 mRNA concentrations were elevated after acute dexamethasone in PTSD patients, improved upon partial remission of PTSD, and were also elevated in the prefrontal cortex of PTSD-like mice. Moreover, blood TNFR1 and IL1R2 were markedly underexpressed in PTSD patients. The results suggest that TNFR1 and MMP9 mRNA expression might be involved in PTSD pathobiology and could potentially serve as diagnostic blood biomarkers for PTSD, while post-dexamethasone blood MMP9 hyperexpression might also serve as a potential treatment monitoring biomarker for PTSD.
Although matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP9) has been found associated with various psychiatric disorders and with threat memories in humans, its role in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and related animal models is understudied. Thus, we analyzed MMP9 mRNA expression kinetics during two different stress experiments, i.e., the Trier Social Stress Test and the dexamethasone suppression test (DST), in whole blood of two independent cohorts of PTSD patients vs. non-traumatized healthy controls (HC) and, moreover, in a mouse model of PTSD and in dexamethasone-treated mice. Besides MMP9, we quantified mRNA levels of four of its regulators, i.e., interleukin (IL)-1 receptor 1 and 2 (IL1R1, IL1R2), IL-6 receptor and tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (TNFR1) in 10 patients exposed to the DST before vs. after successful PTSD psychotherapy vs. 13 HC and, except from Il6r, also in different brain regions of the PTSD mouse model. We are the first to show that blood MMP9 mRNA concentrations were elevated after acute dexamethasone in PTSD patients, improved upon partial remission of PTSD and were, furthermore, also elevated, together with its regulator Tnfr1, in the prefrontal cortex of PTSDlike mice. In contrast, blood TNFR1 and IL1R2 were markedly underexpressed in PTSD patients. In conclusion, we found translational evidence supporting that, I, TNFR1 and MMP9 mRNA expression might be involved in PTSD pathobiology, II, might constitute potential diagnostic blood biomarkers for PTSD and, importantly, III, post-dexamethasone blood MMP9 hyperexpression, which speculatively results from post-dexamethasone underexpression of IL1R2, might serve also as potential treatment monitoring biomarker for PTSD. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.

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