info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Pro-inflammatory monocyte profile in patients with major depressive disorder and suicide behaviour and how ketamine induces antiinflammatory M2 macrophages by NMDAR and mTOR
Fecha
2019-12Registro en:
Nowak, Wanda; Grendas, Leandro Nicolás; Sanmarco, Liliana María; Estecho, Ivana Gisele; Arena, Ángeles Romina; et al.; Pro-inflammatory monocyte profile in patients with major depressive disorder and suicide behaviour and how ketamine induces antiinflammatory M2 macrophages by NMDAR and mTOR; The Lancet; EBioMedicine; 50; 12-2019; 290-305
2352-3964
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Nowak, Wanda
Grendas, Leandro Nicolás
Sanmarco, Liliana María
Estecho, Ivana Gisele
Arena, Ángeles Romina
Eberhardt, Natalia
Rodante, Demián Emanuel
Aoki, María Pilar
Daray, Federico Manuel
Carrera Silva, Eugenio Antonio
Errasti, Andrea Emilse
Resumen
Background: Depression is a highly prevalent disorder that is one of the leading causes of disability worldwide. Despite an unknown aetiology, evidence suggests that the innate and adaptive immune systems play a significant role in the development and maintenance of major depressive disorder (MDD). The non-competitive glutamatergic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antagonist, (R,S)-ketamine (ketamine), has demonstrated rapid and robust efficacy as an antidepressant when administered at sub-anaesthetic doses. Methods: Our goal was to characterize the pro-inflammatory profile of patients with MDD by measuring proinflammatory cytokines in plasma and circulating monocyte subsets and to understand how ketamine induces an anti-inflammatory program in monocyte and macrophages in vitro and vivo. Finding: Our results show that patients with MDD without other comorbidities (N= 33) exhibited significantly higher levels of pro-inflammatory IL-12 and IL-6 in plasma and that these cytokines were associated with increased numbers of non-classical (CD11b+ CD16brightCD14neg) monocytes and increased activation state (CD40+ CD86+ ) of classical monocytes in circulation. Remarkably, we have demonstrated that sub-anaesthetic doses of ketamine programs human monocytes into M2c-like macrophages by inducing high levels of CD163 and MERTK with intermediate levels of CD64 and stimulating mTOR-associated gene expression in vitro. The NMDAR antagonist MK-801, but not the a-amino-3‑hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) antagonist, NBQX, also polarizes macrophages to an M2c-like phenotype, but this phenotype disappears upon mTOR pathway inhibition. Subanaesthetic doses (10 mg/kg) of ketamine administration in mice both promote reduction of circulating classical pro-inflammatory monocytes and increase of alternative M2 macrophage subtypes in the spleen and CNS. Interpretation: Our results suggest an anti-inflammatory property of ketamine that can skew macrophages to an M2-like phenotype, highlighting potential therapeutic implications not only for patients with MDD but also other inflammatory-based diseases.