Suzuki Kazuhiro, Yamasaki Syudo, Miyashita Mitsuhiro, Ando Shuntaro, Toriumi Kazuya, Yoshikawa Akane, Nakanishi Miharu, Morimoto Yuko, Kanata Sho, Fujikawa Shinya, Endo Kaori, Koike Shinsuke, Usami Satoshi, Itokawa Masanari, Washizuka Shinsuke, Hiraiwa-Hasegawa Mariko, Meltzer Herbert Y, Kasai Kiyoto, Nishida Atsushi, Arai Makoto
Schizophrenia Research Project, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Psychiatry, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Matsumoto, Japan.
Schizophrenia (Heidelb). 2022 Apr 27;8(1):44. doi: 10.1038/s41537-022-00249-5.
Muscular strength, assessed by handgrip, is a risk indicator for psychiatric disorders, including psychosis. However, the biological mechanisms underlying this association remain unclear. Since advanced glycation end products (AGEs) play a key role in skeletal muscle underdevelopment and psychosis, we examined the role of AGEs in the longitudinal association between muscular strength and psychotic symptoms among adolescents. We first evaluated the direction of the relationship between handgrip strength and urine levels of pentosidine, a representative AGEs in a population-based birth cohort of 1,542 adolescents at ages 12 and 14. Then, we examined the role of AGEs in the longitudinal association between handgrip strength and thought problems (TP), as a psychotic symptom indicator, in a subsample of 256 adolescents at ages 13 and 14. An autoregressive cross-lagged model revealed that handgrip strength at age 12 negatively predicted pentosidine levels at age 14 (β = -0.20, p < 0.001), whereas pentosidine levels at age 12 did not predict handgrip strength at age 14 (β = 0.04, p = 0.062). Moreover, pentosidine levels had a significant indirect effect on the relationship between handgrip strength and TP (standard indirect effect = -0.051, p = 0.012), which remained significant after adjusting for gender and preceded TP and pentosidine levels. Thus, adolescents with low muscular strength are at a high risk of developing psychotic symptoms, which could be mediated by AGEs. Future studies need to investigate whether interventions focused on muscular strength prevent the accumulation of AGEs and thereby prevent the development of psychosis.
通过握力评估的肌肉力量是包括精神病在内的精神障碍的一个风险指标。然而,这种关联背后的生物学机制仍不清楚。由于晚期糖基化终产物(AGEs)在骨骼肌发育不全和精神病中起关键作用,我们研究了AGEs在青少年肌肉力量与精神病症状纵向关联中的作用。我们首先在一个基于人群的1542名12岁和14岁青少年出生队列中,评估握力与戊糖苷(一种代表性的AGEs)尿液水平之间关系的方向。然后,我们在256名13岁和14岁青少年的子样本中,研究了AGEs在握力与作为精神病症状指标的思维问题(TP)纵向关联中的作用。自回归交叉滞后模型显示,12岁时的握力对14岁时的戊糖苷水平有负向预测作用(β = -0.20,p < 0.001),而12岁时的戊糖苷水平对14岁时的握力没有预测作用(β = 0.04,p = 0.062)。此外,戊糖苷水平对握力与TP之间的关系有显著的间接效应(标准间接效应 = -0.051,p = 0.012),在调整性别、TP和戊糖苷水平之前,该效应仍然显著。因此,肌肉力量低的青少年患精神病症状的风险很高,这可能由AGEs介导。未来的研究需要调查专注于肌肉力量的干预措施是否能防止AGEs的积累,从而预防精神病的发展。