Author:
Lin Caigui,Hu Qing,Dong Jiyang,Wei Zhiliang,Li Jie,Chen Zhong
Abstract
IntroductionSchizophrenia (SZ) is a severe chronic mental disorder with increased risk of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, which is incurable currently and induces various negative emotions and psychological pressures in patients to exacerbate mental disorders. To facilitate the therapeutic design for SZ patients complicated with HBV infection (SZ + HBV), it is helpful to first elucidate the metabolic perturbations in SZ + HBV patients.MethodsIn this study, metabolic profiles of the serum samples from four groups of participants comprising healthy controls (HC, n = 72), HBV infection (n = 52), SZ patients (n = 37), and SZ + HBV (n = 41) patients were investigated using a high-resolution 1H NMR-based metabolomics approach.Results and discussionDistinguishable metabolic profiles were found in the four groups. In comparison with HC, HBV infection induced increased levels of citrate and succinate to perturbate the tricarboxylic acid cycle and succinate-related pathways. Similar to SZ cases, SZ + HBV patients exhibited decreased glucose but increased citrate, pyruvate, and lactate, suggesting the occurrence of disturbance in glucose metabolism. Moreover, in comparison with HC, several serum amino acid levels in SZ + HBV patients were significantly altered. Our findings suggest that Warburg effect, energy metabolism disorders, neurotransmitter metabolism abnormalities, mitochondrial dysfunction and several disturbed pathways in relation to tyrosine and choline appear to play specific and central roles in the pathophysiology of SZ + HBV. Apart from replicating metabolic alterations induced by SZ and HBV separately (e.g., in energy metabolism and Warburg effect), the specific metabolic abnormalities in the SZ + HBV group (e.g., several tyrosine- and choline-related pathways) highlighted the existence of a synergistic action between SZ and HBV pathologies. Current study revealed the metabolic alterations specific to the interaction between SZ and HBV pathologies, and may open important perspectives for designing precise therapies for SZ + HBV patients beyond the simple combination of two individual treatments.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1 articles.
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