Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jul 2022)

The role of leptin in indirectly mediating “somatic anxiety” symptoms in major depressive disorder

  • Yue Zhu,
  • Yue Zhu,
  • Yange Wei,
  • Yange Wei,
  • Jia Duan,
  • Jia Duan,
  • Jianing Li,
  • Ran Zhang,
  • Ran Zhang,
  • Jiaze Sun,
  • Jiaze Sun,
  • Pengshuo Wang,
  • Pengshuo Wang,
  • Zhuang Liu,
  • Jing Lv,
  • Jing Lv,
  • Jing Lv,
  • Shengnan Wei,
  • Shengnan Wei,
  • Xiaowei Jiang,
  • Xiaowei Jiang,
  • Fei Wang,
  • Fei Wang,
  • Fei Wang,
  • Yanqing Tang,
  • Yanqing Tang,
  • Yanqing Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.757958
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundLeptin is a multifunctional hormone secreted from adipose tissue, which plays a core role in regulating energy intake and expenditure. Evidence has demonstrated that leptin receptors are located in brain areas involved in emotional processing, and major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by dysfunction of emotional processing. Taken together, these features suggest that leptin may play a potential role in the pathophysiology of MDD. However, the precise roles of leptin in modulating depressive symptoms in MDD remain unclear.MethodsParticipants [18 drug-naïve MDD patients, 15 unaffected first-degree relatives of MDD patients (FDR-MDD), and 40 healthy controls] completed clinical assessments and provided blood samples for measurement of leptin levels. We evaluated the effect of leptin on clinical status (MDD or FDR-MDD) and symptomatic dimensionalities of MDD using mediation analysis.ResultsWe found that leptin was increased in MDD patients and this only predicted “somatic anxiety” symptoms. Furthermore, leptin was a significant and indirect mediator of the association between clinical status (MDD or FDR-MDD) and “somatic anxiety” symptoms.ConclusionOur finding that leptin was a significant and indirect mediator of clinical status (MDD or FDR-MDD) and “somatic anxiety” symptoms suggests that leptin may indirectly affect somatic depressive symptoms in MDD. Our findings may provide a theoretical basis for novel clinical interventions in MDD.

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