European Psychiatry (Jun 2022)

Association between inflammation and neural plasticity biomarkers in olfactory neuroepithelium – derived cells and cognitive performance in patients with major depressive disorder

  • A. Toll,
  • M. Portella,
  • P. Robledo,
  • M. Barrera-Conde,
  • R. De La Torre,
  • J.M. Ginés,
  • C. Diez-Aja,
  • V. Soria,
  • P. Lopez-Garcia,
  • V. Pérez-Solà,
  • P. Alvarez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.1413
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 65
pp. S552 – S552

Abstract

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Introduction Inflammation and neural plasticity play a significant role in major depressive disorder (MDD) pathogenesis and cognitive dysfunction. The olfactory neuroepithelium (ON), closely related to the central nervous system (CNS), allows a non-invasive, low-cost study of neuropsychiatric disorders. However, few studies have used ON cells to ascertain them as biomarkers for MDD. Objectives Determine the relationship between inflammatory/neural plasticity markers and cognitive functioning in MDD patients and healthy controls. Methods Sample: 9 MDD patients and 7 healthy controls. Exclusion criteria: other Axis I mental disorders (patients) or any mental disorder (controls) and any inflammatory, autoimmune, or CNS diseases. Assessment: sociodemographic, clinical, and cognitive variables (CANTAB) were recorded. mRNA was isolated from ON cells and MAPK14, IL6, TNF-α, Mecp2, BDNF, GSK3, GRIA2, and FosB gene expression levels were quantified using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Results MDD patients showed decreased levels of BDNF (p=0.022), GSK3 (p=0.027), and working memory (p=0.024) compared with healthy controls. In healthy controls, planning was positively correlated with NRF2, BDNF, and MAPK14 gene expression. In MDD patients no correlation between cognitive parameters and inflammation/neural plasticity biomarkers was found. Conclusions These results reveal that: (1) Plasticity biomarkers such as BDNF and GSK3 could be useful diagnostic tools for MDD (2) MDD is associated with working memory deficits; (3) no association could be determined between planning and NRF2, BDNF, and MAPK14 gene expression in MDD and (4) the ON is a promising model in the study of neuropsychiatric disorders. Disclosure No significant relationships.

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