Posts Tagged ‘tranquilizers’

A group of Israel researchers has discovered that rats with increased levels of the omega-6 fatty acid, arachidonic acid, show signs of depression.  There is also evidence that  a dietary deficiency in omega-3 fatty acids may be associated with depression.  The  “phospholipid hypothesis” postulates decreased omega-3 fatty acid intake could be responsible for some types of depression.

The details of their findings appear in the Journal of Lipid Research  showing that omega-3 fatty acid concentration in the blood of depressed patients is lower than that in control patients.  Dr. Green in collaboration with Dr Gal Yadid of Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan used the Flinders Sensitive Line rats to investigate the link between omega-3 fatty acids and depression. They examined the brains of the depressed rats and compared them with brains from normal rats. Surprisingly, they found that the main difference between the two types of rats was in omega-6 fatty acid levels and not omega-3 fatty acid levels. Specifically, they discovered that brains from rats with depression had higher concentrations of arachidonic acid, a long-chain unsaturated metabolite of omega-6 fatty acid.

Arachidonic acid is found throughout the body and is essential for the proper functioning of almost every body organ, including the brain. It serves a wide variety of purposes, from being a purely structural element in phospholipids to being involved in signal transduction and being a substrate for a host of derivatives involved in second messenger function.

“The finding that in the depressive rats the omega-3 fatty acid levels were not decreased, but arachidonic acid was substantially increased as compared to controls is somewhat unexpected,” admits Dr. Green. “But the finding lends itself nicely to the theory that increased omega-3 fatty acid intake may shift the balance between the two fatty acid families in the brain, since it has been demonstrated in animal studies that increased omega-3 fatty acid intake may result in decreased brain arachidonic acid.”

Although far less attention has been paid to dietary requirements for omega-6 fatty acids, which can be found in most edible oils and meat, perhaps in the future depression may be controlled by increasing omega-3 fatty acid intake and decreasing omega-6 fatty acid intake.

———————————–
Article adapted by MD Only from original press release.
———————————–

Contact: Nicole Kresge
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB) is a nonprofit scientific and educational organization with over 11,000 members in the United States and internationally. Most members teach and conduct research at colleges and universities. Others conduct research in various government laboratories, nonprofit research institutions, and industry.

The manuscript for the Journal of Lipid Research paper can be downloaded from clicking Here