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Dopaminergic pathways in obesity-associated immuno-metabolic depression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2018

Fernanda Leite*
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Haematology, Centro Hospitalar do Porto, Porto, Portugal UMIB/ICBAS – Unit for Multidisciplinary Investigation in Biomedicine – Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas Abel Salazar, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal
Ângela Leite
Affiliation:
Laureate International Universities, Universidade Europeia, Lisbon, Portugal
Emanuela Rasini
Affiliation:
Center for Research in Medical Pharmacology, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy
Michela Gaiazzi
Affiliation:
Center for Research in Medical Pharmacology, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy
Laura Ribeiro
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health Sciences, Forensic and Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal I3S-Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal
Franca Marino
Affiliation:
Center for Research in Medical Pharmacology, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy
Marco Cosentino
Affiliation:
Center for Research in Medical Pharmacology, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy
*
Author for correspondence: Fernanda Leite, E-mail: fernandajtleite@hotmail.com
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

Immuno-metabolic diseases emerge in clusters since a state of chronic systemic inflammation associated to metabolic dysfunction disrupts homeostasis in multiple organs such as adipose tissue and brain (Hotamisligil, Reference Hotamisligil2017). The association between obesity and depression is well established (Lasselin and Capuron, Reference Lasselin and Capuron2014), although the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain unrevealed. Lamers et al. (Reference Lamers, Milaneschi, de Jonge, Giltay and Penninx2018) found increased appetite as the core symptom driving the associations between depression and both metabolic and inflammatory markers highlighting a specific biological type of depression. The novelty of such findings resides in the mechanisms regulating appetite such as dopaminergic pathways being also involved in immunomodulation and inflammation. Systemic inflammation is a stronger contributor of obesity-related depressive symptoms than metabolic dysfunction per se (Delgado et al., Reference Delgado, Huet, Dexpert, Beau, Forestier, Ledaguenel, Aubert, Sauvant, Aouizerate, Magne and Capuron2018). Major depressive disorder patients, during a depressive episode, have a subclinical inflammation and reduced response to lipopolysaccharide in monocytes (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Xu, Li, Lu, Shi, Ji and Wang2018). Moreover, higher leptin was associated with hyperphagia, independently from weight (Milaneschi et al., Reference Milaneschi, Lamers, Peyrot, Baune, Breen, Dehghan, Forstner, Grabe, Homuth, Kan, Lewis, Mullins, Nauck, Pistis, Preisig, Rivera, Rietschel, Streit, Strohmaier, Teumer, Van der Auwera, Wray, Boomsma and Penninx2017). We found that plasma levels of leptin, very-low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol and CD14 expression in monocyte subsets are predictors of subclinical inflammatory obesity (Leite et al., Reference Leite, Leite, Santos, Lima, Barbosa, Cosentino and Ribeiro2017a), which can constitute an important tool for early therapeutic interventions in obesity-related comorbidities, namely depression.

Dopaminergic pathways have a major role in appetite regulation and as immunoregulators in inflammation. Immune cells, neurons and adipocytes share common signalling pathways mediated by catecholamines (CA), and dopamine (DA) plays a prominent and so far, possibly underestimated role (Flierl et al., Reference Flierl, Rittirsch, Huber-Lang, Sarma and Ward2008; Borcherding et al., Reference Borcherding, Hugo, Idelman, De Silva, Richtand, Loftus and Ben-Jonathan2011; Pinoli et al., Reference Pinoli, Marino and Cosentino2017). DA regulates behaviour, reward, movement, endocrine, cardiovascular, renal and gastrointestinal functions, but it is also a crucial transmitter in the neuroimmune network, contributing to the nervous–immune systems interplay as well as in the communication among immune cells (Pinoli et al., Reference Pinoli, Marino and Cosentino2017). We showed that central obesity is associated with a distinct pattern of CA receptors in circulating immune cells and that β 2-adrenoceptors (AR) and dopaminergic receptors (DR)D2 might be protective towards visceral obesity (Leite et al., Reference Leite, Lima, Marino, Cosentino and Ribeiro2016, Reference Leite, Lima, Marino, Cosentino and Ribeiro2017b). β 2-AR and DRD2 transcripts were associated with lower inflammatory pattern of monocytes and with a better metabolic profile, suggesting an immunomodulatory role for CA in obesity-associated inflammation.

DA exerts its effects through the interaction with five different DR (D1−5). Human monocytes express all DR and evidence suggests that DA inhibit monocyte NLRP3 inflammasome thus resulting in the reduction of the inflammatory processes (Pinoli et al., Reference Pinoli, Marino and Cosentino2017).

Monocytes in peripheral blood are considered as classical (CD14++CD16), intermediate (CD14++CD16+) and non-classical monocytes (CD14+CD16++). Expansion of the intermediate monocyte subset has been described in chronic inflammatory diseases (Wong et al., Reference Wong, Yeap, Tai, Ong, Dang and Wong2012), while the contribution of non-classical monocyte subset in inflammation remains unclear.

We studied DR expression in human monocyte subsets and the effect of DA on phosphorylation of monocyte signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), a crucial step in the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in obesity and interacts with the double-stranded RNA-sensing kinase PKR, a critical mediator of inflammasome activity and metabolic regulation (Hotamisligil, Reference Hotamisligil2017). Our results show that all five DR are expressed by circulating monocytes, however DR+ cells are on average only 16–33% of classical and intermediate monocytes but about 89–96% of non-classical monocytes, and incubation of whole blood with DA reduced IL-6-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 in CD14+ monocytes (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1. Dopaminergic receptors are preferentially expressed on proinflammatory monocytes and dopamine downregulates STAT3 phosphorylation. (a) In peripheral blood, the majority of circulating monocytes is represented by classical (CD14++ CD16−) monocytes, while intermediate (CD14++ CD16+) and proinflammatory (CD14+ CD16++) monocytes are on average, respectively, 13% and 8% of total monocytes. (b) Both D1- and D2-like dopaminergic receptors (DR) are expressed by circulating monocytes; however, while on average only 16–33% of classical (empty) and intermediate (shaded) monocytes are DR+, with low expression levels, about 89–96% of proinflammatory monocytes (dashed) are DR+, with high expression levels. (c) Incubation of whole blood with dopamine 1 µm reduces IL-6 100 ng/mL-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 in CD14+monocytes (methodology in online Supplementary Information).

Preferential DR expression on non-classical monocytes in comparison with classical and intermediate monocyte subsets suggests that DA anti-inflammatory effects involve mainly non-classical monocytes. Our findings in human monocytes of reduction of IL-6-induced STAT3 phosphorylation by DA infers an immunomodulatory role for this CA given STAT3 function in the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and its interaction with PKR mediating metabolic signals and inflammasome activity.

DA and dopaminergic agonists interfere with tumour necrosis factor-α and nitric oxide production in mouse monocytes and DA modulate the expression of surface markers, such as the Fc-γ receptor, important for host defence (Pinoli et al., Reference Pinoli, Marino and Cosentino2017). This suggests that dopaminergic pathways in human monocytes may counteract the effects of proinflammatory stimuli, acting on the non-classical subset and to a minor extent in the intermediate subset, the main responding subset of monocytes to standardized low-grade inflammation (Thaler et al., Reference Thaler, Hohensinner, Krychtiuk, Matzneller, Koller, Brekalo, Maurer, Huber, Zeitlinger, Jilma, Wojta and Speidl2016).

Macrophages convey information to the nervous system regulating behaviour, metabolism and inflammation through direct access to CA produced by the sympathetic nerve (Camell et al., Reference Camell, Sander, Spadaro, Lee, Nguyen, Wing, Goldberg, Youm, Brown, Elsworth, Rodeheffer, Schultze and Dixit2017). However, monocytes/macrophages themselves produce CA (Marino and Cosentino, Reference Marino and Cosentino2013; Pinoli et al., Reference Pinoli, Marino and Cosentino2017). CA, particularly DA, are key signalling molecules connecting monocytes/macrophages, adipocytes and sympathetic nerve terminals thus regulating immuno-metabolic disease clusters including depression. Dopaminergic pathways might thus allow simultaneously targeting adiposity, inflammation and the immuno-metabolic depression.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291718001587.

Author contributions

FL, MC and FM analysed the data, conceived and wrote the manuscript with the contribution of ER, MG, AL and LR. ER and MG-produced the experiments. All authors were involved in drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content, and all authors approved the final version to be published. All authors agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that the questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved and declare to have confidence in the integrity of the contributions of their co-authors.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Dopaminergic receptors are preferentially expressed on proinflammatory monocytes and dopamine downregulates STAT3 phosphorylation. (a) In peripheral blood, the majority of circulating monocytes is represented by classical (CD14++ CD16−) monocytes, while intermediate (CD14++ CD16+) and proinflammatory (CD14+ CD16++) monocytes are on average, respectively, 13% and 8% of total monocytes. (b) Both D1- and D2-like dopaminergic receptors (DR) are expressed by circulating monocytes; however, while on average only 16–33% of classical (empty) and intermediate (shaded) monocytes are DR+, with low expression levels, about 89–96% of proinflammatory monocytes (dashed) are DR+, with high expression levels. (c) Incubation of whole blood with dopamine 1 µm reduces IL-6 100 ng/mL-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 in CD14+monocytes (methodology in online Supplementary Information).

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