A new study has shown that different isoforms or ‘flavours’ of key proteins have different effects in males and females, causing psychiatric drugs to function well in one gender and in others to be ineffective or a have host of side effects.
“The ultimate goal is to find the kink in the armor of mental illness—the proteins in the brain that we can specifically target without impacting other organs and causing side effects,” explained Charles Hoeffer, an assistant professor of integrative physiology at the Institute for Behavioral Genetics. “Personalisation is also key. We need to stop hitting every mental illness with the same hammer.
AKT was discovered in the 1970s and known as a gene which resulted in cancer when mutation was present. It is now known to play a role in “synaptic plasticity”, where synaptic connections between neurons are strengthened to encode memories.
“Let’s say you see a shark and you’re scared and your brain wants to form a memory. You have to make new proteins to encode that memory,” explained Hoeffer.
Different isoforms have different functions in the brain; AKT1 together with AKT2 in the prefrontal cortex is important for making new memories.
“These subtle differences could be really important if you wanted to personalise treatments for people,” explained Marissa Ehringer, an associate professor of integrative physiology who partnered with Hoeffer on some of the research.
The researchers spent six years examining the brains of male and female animals, and the role the loss of AKT played. For example, male mice with functioning AKT1 were much better than those without AKT1 when it came to “extinction learning”—replacing an old memory, or association that is no longer needed. However, in female mice, not having AKT1 did not make much difference.
“We found the difference between males and females to be so great it became the focus of our work,” Hoeffer said. “It was like night and day.”
Although there is much still to be learned, Hoeffer suspects that there are many other such key proteins having different effects or purposes in males and females.
“To help more people suffering from mental illness we need much more knowledge about the difference between male and female brains and how they could be treated differently,” Hoeffer said. “This study is an important step in that direction.”
Source:Medical Xpress
Journal information: Helen Wong et al. Isoform-specific roles for AKT in affective behavior, spatial memory, and extinction related to psychiatric disorders, eLife (2020). DOI: 10.7554/eLife.56630