Do Lithium and Anticonvulsants Target the Brain Arachidonic Acid Cascade in Bipolar Disorder?
- 1 July 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of General Psychiatry
- Vol. 59 (7) , 592-596
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.59.7.592
Abstract
Background Lithium and certain anticonvulsants, including carbamazepine and valproic acid, are effective antimanic drugs for treating bipolar disorder, but their mechanisms of action remain uncertain. Experimental Observations Feeding rats lithium chloride for 6 weeks, to produce a brain lithium concentration of 0.7mM, reduced arachidonic acid turnover within brain phospholipids by 75%. The effect was highly specific, as turnover rates of docosahexaenoic acid and palmitic acid were unaffected. Arachidonate turnover in rat brain also was reduced by long-term valproic acid administration. Lithium's reduction of arachidonate turnover corresponded to its down-regulating gene expression and enzyme activity of cytosolic phospholipase A2, an enzyme that selectively liberates arachidonic but not docosahexaenoic acid from phospholipids. Lithium also reduced the brain protein level and activity of cyclooxygenase2, as well as the brain concentration of prostaglandin E2, an arachidonate metabolite produced via cyclooxygenase 2. Conclusions These results give rise to the hypothesis that lithium and antimanic anticonvulsants act by targeting parts of the "arachidonic acid cascade," which may be functionally hyperactive in mania. Thus, drugs that target enzymes in the cascade, such as cyclooxygenase 2 inhibitors, might be candidate treatments for mania. Also, in view of competition between arachidonic and docosahexaenoic acids in a number of functional processes, docosahexaenoic acid or its precursors would be expected to be therapeutic. Neither of these predictions is evident from other current hypotheses for the antimanic action of lithium and anticonvulsant drugs.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of gene expression with cDNA microarrays in rat brain after 7 and 42 days of oral lithium administrationBrain Research Bulletin, 2002
- Regulated formation of eicosanoidsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2001
- Open-label adjunctive topiramate in the treatment of bipolar disordersBiological Psychiatry, 2000
- Bipolar illness and schizophrenia as oligogenic diseases: implications for the futureBiological Psychiatry, 2000
- Anti-bipolar therapy: mechanism of action of lithiumMolecular Psychiatry, 1999
- Lithium response and genetics of affective disordersJournal of Affective Disorders, 1994
- The effects of acute and chronic lithium treatment on pilocarpine-stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis in mouse brain in vivoBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1990
- Inositol phosphates and cell signallingNature, 1989
- Chronically Administered Lithium Alters Neither myo‐Inositol Monophosphatase Activity nor Phosphoinositide Levels in Rat BrainJournal of Neurochemistry, 1989
- Possible role of prostaglandin E1 in the affective disorders and in alcoholism.BMJ, 1980