Cigarette smoking and tryptophan hydroxylase 2 mRNA in the dorsal raphe nucleus in suicides

Auteurs

Helene Bach, Victoria Arango, Suham A Kassir, Andrew J Dwork, John J Mann, Mark D Underwood.

Résumé

Cigarette smoking is associated with suicide and mood disorders and stimulates serotonin release. Tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH2) synthesizes serotonin and is over-expressed in suicides. We determined whether smoking is associated with TPH2 mRNA in suicides and controls. TPH2 mRNA was measured postmortem in the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) of controls (N = 26, 17 nonsmokers and nine smokers) and suicides (N = 23, 5 nonsmokers and 18 smokers). Psychiatric history was obtained by psychological autopsy. TPH2 mRNA was greater in suicide nonsmokers than suicide smokers, control smokers and control nonsmokers (p = 0.006). There was more TPH2 mRNA throughout the DRN. Smoking interferes with the TPH2 mRNA increase observed in suicide nonsmokers. The absence of altered TPH2 expression in non-suicide smokers suggests no pharmacological effect of smoking. SUICIDE-COMPLÉTÉ TABAGISME CIGARETTE SÉROTONINE TROUBLE-HUMEUR BIOLOGIE AUTOPSIE-PSYCHOLOGIQUE NEUROLOGIE


Retour à la recherche