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Insulin-signaling abnormalities in drug-naïve first-episode schizophrenia: Transduction protein analyses in extracellular vesicles of putative neuronal origin.

Authors :
Kapogiannis D
Dobrowolny H
Tran J
Mustapic M
Frodl T
Meyer-Lotz G
Schiltz K
Schanze D
Rietschel M
Bernstein HG
Steiner J
Source :
European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists [Eur Psychiatry] 2019 Oct; Vol. 62, pp. 124-129. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Oct 04.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: Metabolic syndrome and impaired insulin sensitivity may occur as side effects of atypical antipsychotic drugs. However, studies of peripheral insulin resistance using the homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) or oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) suggest that abnormal glucose metabolism is already present in drug-naive first-episode schizophrenia (DNFES). We hypothesized impairments of neuronal insulin signaling in DNFES.<br />Methods: To gain insight into neuronal insulin-signaling in vivo, we analyzed peripheral blood extracellular vesicles enriched for neuronal origin (nEVs). Phosphorylated insulin signal transduction serine-threonine kinases pS312-IRS-1, pY-IRS-1, pS473-AKT, pS9-GSK3β, pS2448-mTOR, pT389-p70S6K and respective total protein levels were determined in plasma nEVs from 48 DNFES patients and healthy matched controls after overnight fasting.<br />Results: Upstream pS312-IRS-1 was reduced at trend level (p = 0.071; this condition may amplify IRS-1 signaling). Exploratory omnibus analysis of downstream serine-threonine kinases (AKT, GSK3β, mTOR, p70S6K) revealed lower phosphorylated/total protein ratios in DNFES vs. controls (p = 0.013), confirming decreased pathway activation. Post-hoc-tests indicated in particular a reduced phosphorylation ratio of mTOR (p = 0.027). Phosphorylation ratios of p70S6K (p = 0.029), GSK3β (p = 0.039), and at trend level AKT (p = 0.061), showed diagnosis-dependent statistical interactions with insulin blood levels. The phosphorylation ratio of AKT correlated inversely with PANSS-G and PANSS-total scores, and other ratios showed similar trends.<br />Conclusion: These findings support the hypothesis of neuronal insulin resistance in DNFES, small sample sizes notwithstanding. The counterintuitive trend towards reduced pS312-IRS-1 in DNFES may result from adaptive feedback mechanisms. The observed changes in insulin signaling could be clinically meaningful as suggested by their association with higher PANSS scores.<br /> (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1778-3585
Volume :
62
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31590015
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2019.08.012