4.7 Article

Intra-individual state-dependent comparison of plasma mitochondrial DNA copy number and IL-6 levels in patients with bipolar disorder

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 299, Issue -, Pages 644-651

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.10.098

Keywords

Bipolar disorder; Circulating cell-free mitochondrial DNA; Damage-associated molecular patterns; Interleukin-6

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [16K19257]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16K19257] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Patients with bipolar disorder have elevated plasma IL-6 levels, higher in depressed patients than in remitted patients. However, the study did not find a significant difference in plasma circulating cell-free mitochondrial DNA levels between depressed and remitted BD patients.
Background: Patients with bipolar disorder (BD) have increased plasma IL-6 levels, which are higher in depressed BD (dBD) than remitted BD (rBD). However, the mechanism that differentiates the cytokine levels between dBD and rBD is not understood. First, we determined whether brain-derived mtDNA can be detected in plasma using neuron-specific mutant Polg1 transgenic (Tg) mice. Second, we investigated whether the plasma circulating cellfree mitochondrial DNA (ccf-mtDNA) differentiate the cytokine levels between dBD and rBD. Methods: Mouse plasma ccf-mtDNA levels were measured using real-time PCR targeting two regions of the mtDNA (CO1 and D-loop) in Tg mice and non-Tg littermates. Human plasma ccf-mtDNA levels were measured using real-time PCR targeting two regions of the mtDNA (ND1 and ND4) and IL-6 levels were evaluated in 10 patients in different states (depressed and remitted) of BD in a longitudinal manner and 10 healthy controls. Results: The mouse plasma CO1/D-loop ratio was significantly lower in Tg than non-Tg mice (P = 0.0029). Human plasma ccf-mtDNA copy number, ND4/ND1 ratio, and IL-6 levels were not significantly different between dBD and rBD. Human plasma ccf-mtDNA levels showed a nominal significant correlation with delusional symptoms (P = 0.033, rho = 0.68). Limitations: A larger sample size is required to generalize the results and to determine whether plasma ccf-mtDNA is associated with systemic inflammation. Conclusions: Tg mice revealed that brain-derived mtDNA could be present in peripheral blood. The present findings did not coincide with our hypothesis that plasma ccf-mtDNA differentiates the cytokine levels between dBD and rBD.

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