Serum Levels of S100B Protein and Myelin Basic Protein as a Potential Biomarkers of Recurrent Depressive Disorders

Author:

Levchuk Lyudmila A.1ORCID,Roschina Olga V.1,Mikhalitskaya Ekaterina V.1ORCID,Epimakhova Elena V.1ORCID,Simutkin German G.1ORCID,Bokhan Nikolay A.12,Ivanova Svetlana A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mental Health Research Institute, Tomsk National Research Medical Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Tomsk 634014, Russia

2. Psychiatry, Addictology and Psychotherapy Department, Siberian State Medical University, Tomsk 634050, Russia

Abstract

Nowadays, nervous tissue damage proteins in serum are considered promising drug targets and biomarkers of Mood Disorders. In a cross-sectional naturalistic study, the S100B, MBP and GFAP levels in the blood serum were compared between two diagnostic groups (patients with Depressive Episode (DE, n = 28) and patients with Recurrent Depressive Disorder (RDD, n = 21)), and healthy controls (n = 25). The diagnostic value of serum markers was assessed by ROC analysis. In the DE group, we did not find changed levels of S100B, MBP and GFAP compared with controls. In the RDD group, we found decreased S100B level (p = 0.011) and increased MBP level (p = 0.015) in comparison to those in healthy controls. Provided ROC analysis indicates that MBP contributes to the development of a DE (AUC = 0.676; 95%Cl 0.525–0.826; p = 0.028), and S100B and MBP have a significant effect on the development of RDD (AUC = 0.732; 95%Cl 0.560–0.903; p = 0.013 and AUC = 0.712; 95%Cl 0.557–0.867; p = 0.015, correspondingly). The study of serum markers of nervous tissue damage in patients with a current DE indicates signs of disintegration of structural and functional relationships, dysfunction of gliotransmission, and impaired secretion of neurospecific proteins. Modified functions of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes are implicated in the pathophysiology of RDD.

Funder

the Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

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