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Does obesity and diabetes mellitus metastasize to the brain? “Metaboptosis” and implications for drug discovery and development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 April 2019

Roger S. McIntyre*
Affiliation:
Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit (MDPU), University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada Brain and Cognition Discovery Foundation, Toronto, ON, Canada Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada Department of Pharmacology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Carola Rong
Affiliation:
Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit (MDPU), University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Rodrigo B. Mansur
Affiliation:
Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit (MDPU), University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Elisa Brietzke
Affiliation:
Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit (MDPU), University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
*
*Address correspondence to: Roger S. McIntyre, MD, FRCPC, University Health Network; Brain and Cognition Discovery Foundation, 399 Bathurst Street, Toronto, ON M5T 2S8, Canada. (Email: Roger.McIntyre@uhn.ca)
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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019 

The overarching aim of this commentary is to press the point that alterations in bioenergetics are hypothesized to play a critical role in the pathophysiology of many brain-based disorders (e.g., major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder). As a derivative of this hypothesis, it is further conjectured that agents capable of targeting bioenergetic effector systems may be potentially therapeutic.

Existing pharmacological treatments for mood, psychotic, as well as cognitive disorders in psychiatry, are insufficient from the point of view of achieving robust symptomatic control, functional improvement, reliable quality of life enhancement, and other patient-reported outcomes (PROs).Reference McIntyre1 Moreover, no FDA-approved agent for the foregoing disorders has demonstrated disease modification capability, the holy grail of treatment.

The cul de sac we find ourselves in with respect to psychiatric drug discovery and development, and the absence of a direct line of sight, is largely due to insufficient disease model characterization. Consequently, recapitulating disease models for mental disorders has been elusive and a priority research vista. Notwithstanding, the availability of exciting new technological approaches (e.g. inducible pluripotent stem cell research), computational statistical approaches, as well as surreal insights in neuroscience are providing the reasons to believe that future drugs in psychiatry will be not only based on disease models but possibly also modifying disease processes.Reference Wen, Christian and Song2, Reference O’shea and McInnis3

Molecular, cellular, pharmacologic, animal, human, and clinical data provide convergent evidence indicating that alterations in bioenergetics are critical pathoetiologic processes within abnormal central nervous system (CNS) circuit and network function.Reference Villa, Ferrari and Bagini4 For example, it is amply documented that sub-chronic and chronic alterations in central/peripheral glucose–insulin homeostasis, sirtuin, and incretin function are associated with maladaptive changes in neuronal and glial cellular architecture, morphology, number, density, and function.Reference Srivastava, Faust and Ramos5

It is further observed that chronic alterations in each of the foregoing effectors result in apoptosis and epigenetic aging in animal models.Reference Pietruczuk, Lisowska and Grabowski6 Accelerated apoptosis is also reported in mood, psychotic, and cognitive disorders, and may in some cases be a consequence of central bioenergetic abnormalities.Reference Neth and Craft7 Herein, we propose the moniker “Metaboptosis” to refer to the premature cellular aging and death as a consequence of alterations in intra- and extracellular processes relevant to metabolic effector systems (glucose–insulin homeostasis).Reference Zheng, Wang and Shen8

We also introduce the notion of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (TDM2) “metastasizing” to the CNS, to both explore a unique brain–body heuristic, and more specifically, to underscore the deleterious effects that “metabolic obesity” and/or TDM2 exert on the human CNS.Reference Kalaivani, Uddandrao and Parim9 Results from both population and clinical studies in both general and mixed clinical populations indicate that metabolic obesity and TDM2 are modifiable brain hazards, as evidenced by an increased incidence of domain-based psychopathology (e.g., cognitive impairment), as well as syndromal DSM-5-defined psychopathologies (e.g., mood disorders) in affected persons.Reference Mansur, Brietzke and McIntyre10Reference McIntyre, Soczynska and Konarski12

During the past decade, compelling proof-of-concept data has emerged, indicating that pharmacological treatments that target aberrant intracellular and/or extracellular metabolic processes exert salutary effects on neuronal cellular and sub-cellular function (e.g., mitochondria).Reference Skvarc, Dean and Byrne13 The foregoing observations are replicated in animal studies with accumulating evidence indicating that appropriate “target engagement” with metabolic-based treatments exert beneficial effects, and possibly disease modifying effects, across multiple domains of psychopathology (general cognitive function).

For example, intranasal insulin, incretins (e.g., liraglutide), thiazolidinediones, caloric restriction mimetics (e.g., metformin, resveratrol), as well as SGLT-2 inhibitors, have all exhibited beneficial effects in animal models of depression, reward (e.g., motivation), and general cognitive dysfunction.Reference Sa-Nguanmoo, Tanajak and Kerdphoo14, Reference Colle, de Larminat and Rotenberg15 It is intriguing that select agents (e.g., SGLT-2 inhibitors) have demonstrated anti-apoptotic effects in neuronal cell lines. Several of the foregoing agents have empirical evidence indicating beneficial effects in healthy control and psychiatric populations (without comorbid TDM2).Reference Colle, de Larminat and Rotenberg16 For example, it has emerged that intranasal insulin improves measures of executive function in adults with bipolar disorder, as well as measures of memory in persons with ApoE4-mild cognitive impairment (MCI).Reference McIntyre, Soczynska and Woldeyohannes17Reference Claxton, Baker and Hanson19 Moreover, liraglutide demonstrates beneficial effects across several measures of cognitive function (e.g., executive function) in individuals with mood disorders, independent of its known effect on weight, and coincident with changes in CNS biomarkers of neuronal health.Reference Mansur, Ahmed and Cha20, Reference Mansur, Lee and Subramaniapillai21

Drug discovery and development in psychiatry has stalled during the last 10 years, resulting in the retreat of significant research and development investment. Truly exciting developments have occurred with respect to developing glutamatergic treatments for treatment-resistant syndromes (e.g., intravenous ketamine), with the hope that related agents would be capable of providing rapid onset, robust treatment efficacy with an improved safety profile (e.g., rapastinel).Reference Phillips, Geyer and Robbins22 Notwithstanding, the need exists for scalable and novel treatments for brain-based disorders that engage other (and potentially convergent) target(s) relevant to the disease process implicated in neuropsychiatric disorders.

For the practicing clinical community, we issue an alert to the brain hazards posed by metabolic obesity and TDM2 in individuals at risk or who have declared a mental disorder. The “metastasis” of peripheral metabolic alterations to the brain introduces a set of both preventive and pre-emptive opportunities that are cost-effective, and likely to be clinically relevant and acceptable to most patients (e.g., sleep hygiene, healthier diet, exercise). For both the academic/research and investment communities, ample evidence indicates that developing and/or repurposing pharmacologic agents that engage metabolic systems may not only be symptom suppressing but disease modifying for mood, psychotic, and cognitive disorders.

Disclosures

Dr. McIntyre reports grants from Lundbeck, Shire, Purdue, and Allergan; speaking fees from Shire, Purdue, Otsuka, Janssen-Ortho, Lundbeck, Pfizer, Neurocrine, Neuralstem, Sunovion, Takeda, and Allergan outside the submitted work.

Dr. Mansur reports grants from Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto and Canadian Institutes of Health Research; honorarium from Medical Psychotherapy Association Canada; logistical support from Medical Psychotherapy Association Canada, outside the submitted work.

Dr. Brietzke reports research funding from FAPESP, CNPq, and CAPES; financial support from L’Oreal for Women in Science Award; speaker fees from Daiichi-Sankyo; honoraria from Sanofi, Europharma, Ache, Astra-Zeneca, and Daiichi-Sankyo, outside the submitted work.

Dr. Rong has nothing to disclose.

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