Disturbed circadian rhythms have been observed in seasonal affective disorder (SAD). The aim of this study was to further investigate this connection, and to test for potential association between polymorphisms in circadian clock-related genes and SAD, seasonality (seasonal variations in mood and behavior), or diurnal preference (morningness-eveningness tendencies). A total of 159 European SAD patients and 159 matched controls were included in the genetic analysis, and subsets were screened for seasonality (n ¼ 177) and diurnal preference (n ¼ 92). We found that diurnal preference was associated with both SAD and seasonality, supporting the hypothesis of a link between circadian rhythms and seasonal depression. The complete case-control material was genotyped for polymorphisms in the CLOCK, Period2, Period3, and NPAS2 genes. A significant difference between patients and controls was found for NPAS2 471 Leu/Ser (w 2 ¼ 9.90, Bonferroni corrected P ¼ 0.035), indicating a recessive effect of the leucine allele on disease susceptibility (w 2 ¼ 6.61, Bonferroni corrected P ¼ 0.050). Period3 647 Val/Gly was associated with self-reported morningness-eveningness scores (n ¼ 92, oneway ANOVA: F ¼ 4.99, Bonferroni corrected P ¼ 0.044), with higher scores found in individuals with at least one glycine allele (t ¼ 3.1, Bonferroni corrected P ¼ 0.013). A second, population-based sample of individuals selected for high (n ¼ 127) or low (n ¼ 98) degrees of seasonality, was also genotyped for NPAS2 471 Leu/Ser. There was no significant difference between these seasonality extreme groups, and none of the polymorphisms studied were associated with seasonality in the SAD case-control material (n ¼ 177). In conclusion, our results suggest involvement of circadian clock-related polymorphisms both in susceptibility to SAD and diurnal preference.
In vivo imaging of dopamine D2 receptors with agonist (as opposed to the more commonly employed antagonist) radiotracers could provide important information on the high-affinity (functional) state of the D2 receptor in illnesses such as schizophrenia, movement disorders, and addictions. We report here the radiosynthesis and evaluation of the potent D2 agonist (+)-4-propyl-3,4,4a,5,6,10b-hexahydro-2H-naphtho[1,2-b][1,4]oxazin-9-ol, (+)-3, labeled with carbon-11, as a potential radiotracer for imaging the high-affinity state of dopamine D2 receptors with positron emission tomography (PET). [(11)C]-(+)-3 was reliably synthesized in the quantities and at the specific activities and radiochemical purities required for human PET studies. Ex vivo biodistribution studies in rat brain demonstrated that [(11)C]-(+)-3 crossed the blood-brain barrier readily and had an appropriate regional brain distribution for a radiotracer that maps dopamine D2 receptors. The binding of [(11)C]-(+)-3 was saturable and demonstrated an excellent signal-to-noise ratio as measured by its striatum-to-cerebellum ratio of 5.6, 60 min postinjection. The binding was highly stereospecific, and blocking and displacement studies were consistent with selective and specific binding to the dopamine D2 receptors. Further, [(11)C]-(+)-3 showed marked and appropriate sensitivity to both increases and decreases in the levels of endogenous dopamine. Brain radioactive metabolite and physicochemical measurements are in full accord with the desired properties of a neuroreceptor imaging agent for PET. All of the above, coupled with the documented full D2 agonistic properties of (+)-3, strongly indicate that [(11)C]-(+)-3 is a leading candidate radiotracer for the imaging of the dopamine D2 high-affinity state using PET in human subjects.
It is hypothesized that due to an abnormal functioning of the reward system patients with schizophrenia form context-inappropriate associations. It has been shown that the dopamine target regions, especially the ventral striatum, are critical in the formation of reward associations. We wanted to examine how the ventral striatum responds as patients learn reward-related associations and how this neural response is linked to objective and subjective behavioral measures. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) Blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) responses were examined using aversive Pavlovian learning in 13 medicated patients with schizophrenia and 13 matched healthy controls. Colored circles served as conditioned stimulus (CS + ) while a loud, individually adjusted, noise served as the unconditioned stimulus. Circles of another color served as neutral comparators (CSÀ). Subjective indices were assessed by a post-scan self-report, and galvanic skin responses (GSR) were used as objective measures of associative learning. fMRI data were analyzed using a random effects model in SPM2. Patients showed inappropriately strong activations in the ventral striatum in response to the neutral stimulus (CSÀ) as compared to the healthy controls. Consistent with this neural evidence of aberrant learning, patients also showed evidence of abnormal learning by self-report and as indexed by GSR. The main finding here is that patients with schizophrenia, when exposed to neutral stimuli in a threatening situation, show an abnormal pattern of learning. The aberrant activations and response are consistent with the idea that patients aberrantly assign motivational salience to neutral stimuli, and this process may be one of the aberrations that predisposes them to psychosis.
Bright-light therapy (BLT) is established as the treatment of choice for seasonal affective disorder/winter type (SAD). In the last two decades, the use of BLT has expanded beyond SAD: there is evidence for efficacy in chronic depression, antepartum depression, premenstrual depression, bipolar depression and disturbances of the sleep-wake cycle. Data on the usefulness of BLT in non-seasonal depression are promising; however, further systematic studies are still warranted. In this review, the authors present a comprehensive overview of the literature on BLT in mood disorders. The first part elucidates the neurobiology of circadian and seasonal adaptive mechanisms focusing on the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the indolamines melatonin and serotonin, and the chronobiology of mood disorders. The SCN is the primary oscillator in humans. Indolamines are known to transduce light signals into cells and organisms since early in evolution, and their role in signalling change of season is still preserved in humans: melatonin is synthesized primarily in the pineal gland and is the central hormone for internal clock circuitries. The melatonin precursor serotonin is known to modulate many behaviours that vary with season. The second part discusses the pathophysiology and clinical specifiers of SAD, which can be seen as a model disorder for chronobiological disturbances and the mechanism of action of BLT. In the third part, the mode of action, application, efficacy, tolerability and safety of BLT in SAD and other mood disorders are explored.
The results of the present study suggest that the s-allele of the 5HTTLPR and a positive family history of depression are additive risk factors for the development of depression during TD.
Serotonin transporter binding potential values vary throughout the year with the seasons. Since higher serotonin transporter density is associated with lower synaptic serotonin levels, regulation of serotonin transporter density by season is a previously undescribed physiologic mechanism that has the potential to explain seasonal changes in normal and pathologic behaviors.
Predicting rewards and avoiding aversive conditions is essential for survival. Recent studies using computational models of reward prediction implicate the ventral striatum in appetitive rewards. Whether the same system mediates an organism's response to aversive conditions is unclear. We examined the question using fMRI blood oxygen level-dependent measurements while healthy volunteers were conditioned using appetitive and aversive stimuli. The temporal difference learning algorithm was used to estimate reward prediction error. Activations in the ventral striatum were robustly correlated with prediction error, regardless of the valence of the stimuli, suggesting that the ventral striatum processes salience prediction error. In contrast, the orbitofrontal cortex and anterior insula coded for the differential valence of appetitive/aversive stimuli. Given its location at the interface of limbic and motor regions, the ventral striatum may be critical in learning about motivationally salient stimuli, regardless of valence, and using that information to bias selection of actions.
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