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Investigation of betaine as a novel psychotherapeutic for schizophreniaResearch in context

Authors :
Tetsuo Ohnishi
Shabeesh Balan
Manabu Toyoshima
Motoko Maekawa
Hisako Ohba
Akiko Watanabe
Yoshimi Iwayama
Yuko Fujita
Yunfei Tan
Yasuko Hisano
Chie Shimamoto-Mitsuyama
Yayoi Nozaki
Kayoko Esaki
Atsuko Nagaoka
Junya Matsumoto
Mizuki Hino
Nobuko Mataga
Akiko Hayashi-Takagi
Kenji Hashimoto
Yasuto Kunii
Akiyoshi Kakita
Hirooki Yabe
Takeo Yoshikawa
Source :
EBioMedicine, Vol 45, Iss , Pp 432-446 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Background: Betaine is known to act against various biological stresses and its levels were reported to be decreased in schizophrenia patients. We aimed to test the role of betaine in schizophrenia pathophysiology, and to evaluate its potential as a novel psychotherapeutic. Methods: Using Chdh (a gene for betaine synthesis)-deficient mice and betaine-supplemented inbred mice, we assessed the role of betaine in psychiatric pathophysiology, and its potential as a novel psychotherapeutic, by leveraging metabolomics, behavioral-, transcriptomics and DNA methylation analyses. Findings: The Chdh-deficient mice revealed remnants of psychiatric behaviors along with schizophrenia-related molecular perturbations in the brain. Betaine supplementation elicited genetic background-dependent improvement in cognitive performance, and suppressed methamphetamine (MAP)-induced behavioral sensitization. Furthermore, betaine rectified the altered antioxidative and proinflammatory responses induced by MAP and in vitro phencyclidine (PCP) treatments. Betaine also showed a prophylactic effect on behavioral abnormality induced by PCP. Notably, betaine levels were decreased in the postmortem brains from schizophrenia, and a coexisting elevated carbonyl stress, a form of oxidative stress, demarcated a subset of schizophrenia with “betaine deficit-oxidative stress pathology”. We revealed the decrease of betaine levels in glyoxylase 1 (GLO1)-deficient hiPSCs, which shows elevated carbonyl stress, and the efficacy of betaine in alleviating it, thus supporting a causal link between betaine and oxidative stress conditions. Furthermore, a CHDH variant, rs35518479, was identified as a cis-expression quantitative trait locus (QTL) for CHDH expression in postmortem brains from schizophrenia, allowing genotype-based stratification of schizophrenia patients for betaine efficacy. Interpretation: The present study revealed the role of betaine in psychiatric pathophysiology and underscores the potential benefit of betaine in a subset of schizophrenia. Fund: This study was supported by the Strategic Research Program for Brain Sciences from AMED (Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development) under Grant Numbers JP18dm0107083 and JP19dm0107083 (TY), JP18dm0107129 (MM), JP18dm0107086 (YK), JP18dm0107107 (HY), JP18dm0107104 (AK) and JP19dm0107119 (KH), by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas from the MEXT under Grant Numbers JP18H05435 (TY), JP18H05433 (AH.-T), JP18H05428 (AH.-T and TY), and JP16H06277 (HY), and by JSPS KAKENHI under Grant Number JP17H01574 (TY). In addition, this study was supported by the Collaborative Research Project of Brain Research Institute, Niigata University under Grant Numbers 2018–2809 (YK) and RIKEN Epigenetics Presidential Fund (100214–201801063606-340120) (TY). Keywords: Schizophrenia, Chdh, DNA methylation, Postmortem brain, Carbonyl stress, iPS cell

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Medicine (General)
R5-920

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23523964
Volume :
45
Issue :
432-446
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8e044d4f4b674d4db13d08c405718559
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.05.062