Fabrice Chimienti ,1 Laurent Cavarec, 2, Laurent Vincent , 3 Nicolas Salvetat, 1 Victoria Arango, 4,5 Mark D. Underwood, 4,5 J. John Mann, 4, 5 Jean-François Pujol 1 & Dinah Weissmann 1
1 ALCEDIAG/ Sys2Diag, CNRS UMR 9005, Parc Euromédecine, Montpellier, France
2 Genomic Vision, Green Square, 80-84 rue des Meuniers, 92220, Bagneux, France
3 Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique, Fontenay aux Roses, France
4 Division of Molecular Imaging and Neuropathology, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA
5 Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA
Translational Psychiatry volume 9, Article number: 91 (2019) 
Abstract
Phosphodiesterases
 (PDE) are key modulators of signal transduction and are involved in 
inflammatory cell activation, memory and cognition. There is a two-fold 
decrease in the expression of phosphodiesterase 8A (PDE8A) in the 
temporal cortex of major depressive disorder (MDD) patients. Here, we 
studied PDE8A mRNA-editing profile in two architectonically distinct 
neocortical regions in a clinically well-characterized cohort of age- 
and sex-matched non-psychiatric drug-free controls and depressed suicide
 decedents. By using capillary electrophoresis single-stranded 
conformational polymorphism (CE-SSCP), a previously validated technique 
to identify A-to-I RNA modifications, we report the full editing profile
 of PDE8A in the brain, including identification of two novel editing 
sites. Editing of PDE8A mRNA displayed clear regional difference when 
comparing dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (BA9) and anterior cingulate 
cortex (BA24). Furthermore, we report significant intra-regional 
differences between non-psychiatric control individuals and depressed 
suicide decedents, which could discriminate the two populations. Taken 
together, our results (i) highlight the importance of 
immune/inflammatory markers in major depressive disorder and suicide and
 (ii) establish a direct relationship between A-to-I RNA modifications 
of peripheral markers and A-to-I RNA editing-related modifications in 
brain. This work provides the first immune response-related brain marker
 for suicide and could pave the way for the identification of a 
blood-based biomarker that predicts suicidal behavior.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41398-018-0331-3
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41398-018-0331-3
 
