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Rheumatoid Arthritis Linked To Serotonin Deficiency

Published 17 Mar 2016

Rheumatoid Arthritis Linked To Serotonin Deficiency
For the first time, researchers have directly implicated serotonin in the paraphysiology of rheumatoid arthritis. Serotonin is mostly known as a neurotransmitter, but this shows that it has other important functions.
 
In a study published in The American Journal of Pathology, the researchers showed that inducing serotonin deficiency in mice with rheumatoid arthritis led to a decline in the condition of the mouse model. When serotonin or compounds that activate receptors for the neurotransmitter were present, some effects of rheumatoid arthritis were reduced.
 
"Our study highlights that [serotonin] has a direct immunoregulatory role in arthritis ... and [can] open new perspectives to improve the therapeutic options for patients," said Marie-Christine de Vernejoul, the study's co-lead investigator.
 
Called collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), the mouse model the researchers used resulted in features similar to what people with rheumatoid arthritis develop, like bone and cartilage destruction and osteoclast activation. Osteoclasts are cells responsible for bone resorption.
 
The researchers compared CIA effects in normal mice and those that have been bred to be genetically-deficient in tryptophan hydroxylase-1, a crucial enzyme needed for producing serotonin in peripheral tissues.
 
According to their findings, the researchers saw that osteoclasts were both higher in number and more active in serotonin-deficient mice with arthritis. Additionally, higher levels of bone resorption was reported at both remote sites and affected joints.
 
Arthritic mice deficient in serotonin also exhibited changes in cytokines, cell-signaling molecules, in their paws. They particularly showed a shift in the balance between Th17 lymphocytes and T cell subtypes.
 
 
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When the researchers carried out subsequent experiments using cell cultures, they saw that the balance between Th17 lymphocytes and regulatory T cells normalized when serotonin or compounds that activate receptors for the neurotransmitter were introduced. This points to a direct connection between serotonin and rheumatoid arthritis.
 
Arthritis is the top cause of disability in the United States. Over 50 million adults have been diagnosed with the condition, while nearly 300,000 babies and children have arthritis or a rheumatic condition. It is estimated that, by 2030, that there will be 67 million Americans diagnosed with arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis is more common in women than in men.

1 comment


findogask
on 20/03/2016

This is interesting, but for the past 15 years, I've been taking 80mg Fluoextine (Prozac) per day, and my Rheumatoid Arthritis problems have worsened! Given that the purpose of meds like Fluoxetine is to enhance Serotonin levels in the brain, it would appear, in my case at least, that an enormous daily dose of Serotonin- i.e. well above recommended levels- would be necessary to have any beneficial effects. This calls into question how "good" this news actually is, for sufferers of co-existing Depression and Rheumatoid Arthritis, of which, surely, there must be more than a few?

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