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Metabolic regulation to treat bipolar depression: mechanisms and targeting by trimetazidine

Version 4 2024-06-19, 19:45
Version 3 2024-06-14, 01:27
Version 2 2024-06-02, 22:53
Version 1 2023-07-18, 03:51
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 19:45 authored by S Khanra, P Reddy, A Giménez-Palomo, Johnny ParkJohnny Park, B Panizzutti, M McCallum, SS Arumugham, S Umesh, M Debnath, B Das, G Venkatasubramanian, Melanie AshtonMelanie Ashton, Alyna TurnerAlyna Turner, Olivia DeanOlivia Dean, Ken WalderKen Walder, E Vieta, LN Yatham, I Pacchiarotti, YCJ Reddy, N Goyal, M Kesavan, L Colomer, Michael BerkMichael Berk, JH Kim
AbstractBipolar disorder’s core feature is the pathological disturbances in mood, often accompanied by disrupted thinking and behavior. Its complex and heterogeneous etiology implies that a range of inherited and environmental factors are involved. This heterogeneity and poorly understood neurobiology pose significant challenges to existing drug development paradigms, resulting in scarce treatment options, especially for bipolar depression. Therefore, novel approaches are needed to discover new treatment options. In this review, we first highlight the main molecular mechanisms known to be associated with bipolar depression–mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation and oxidative stress. We then examine the available literature for the effects of trimetazidine in said alterations. Trimetazidine was identified without a priori hypothesis using a gene-expression signature for the effects of a combination of drugs used to treat bipolar disorder and screening a library of off-patent drugs in cultured human neuronal-like cells. Trimetazidine is used to treat angina pectoris for its cytoprotective and metabolic effects (improved glucose utilization for energy production). The preclinical and clinical literature strongly support trimetazidine’s potential to treat bipolar depression, having anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties while normalizing mitochondrial function only when it is compromised. Further, trimetazidine’s demonstrated safety and tolerability provide a strong rationale for clinical trials to test its efficacy to treat bipolar depression that could fast-track its repurposing to address such an unmet need as bipolar depression.

History

Related Materials

Location

England

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Molecular Psychiatry

Volume

28

Pagination

3231-3242

ISSN

1359-4184

eISSN

1476-5578

Issue

8

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE