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Reconceptualization of translocator protein as a biomarker of neuroinflammation in psychiatry

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MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 36-47

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/mp.2017.232

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资金

  1. Forschungskredit - University of Zurich
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation Early Postdoc
  3. Mobility fellowship [P2ZHP3_174868]
  4. Johns Hopkins Doris Duke Early Clinician Investigator Award
  5. Alexander Wilson Schweizer Fellowship
  6. NIH [DA040127, MH092443, MH094268, MH105660]
  7. foundation of Stanley
  8. foundation of S-R/RUSK
  9. foundation of BBRF
  10. Swiss National Science Foundation [310030_169544]
  11. Foundation for Research in Science
  12. Humanities at the University of Zurich

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A great deal of interest in psychiatric research is currently centered upon the pathogenic role of inflammatory processes. Positron emission tomography (PET) using radiolabeled ligands selective for the 18 kDa translocator protein (TSPO) has become the most widely used technique to assess putative neuroimmune abnormalities in vivo. Originally used to detect discrete neurotoxic damages, TSPO has generally turned into a biomarker of 'neuroinflammation' or 'microglial activation'. Psychiatric research has mostly accepted these denotations of TSPO, even if they may be inadequate and misleading under many pathological conditions. A reliable and neurobiologically meaningful diagnosis of 'neuroinflammation' or 'microglial activation' is unlikely to be achieved by the sole use of TSPO PET imaging. It is also very likely that the pathological meanings of altered TSPO binding or expression are disease-specific, and therefore, not easily generalizable across different neuropathologies or inflammatory conditions. This difficulty is intricately linked to the varying (and still ill-defined) physiological functions and cellular expression patterns of TSPO in health and disease. While altered TSPO binding or expression may indeed mirror ongoing neuroinflammatory processes in some cases, it may reflect other pathophysiological processes such as abnormalities in cell metabolism, energy production and oxidative stress in others. Hence, the increasing popularity of TSPO PET imaging has paradoxically introduced substantial uncertainty regarding the nature and meaning of neuroinflammatory processes and microglial activation in psychiatry, and likely in other neuropathological conditions as well. The ambiguity of conceiving TSPO simply as a biomarker of 'neuroinflammation' or 'microglial activation' calls for alternative interpretations and complimentary approaches. Without the latter, the ongoing scientific efforts and excitement surrounding the role of the neuroimmune system in psychiatry may not turn into therapeutic hope for affected individuals.

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