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Publication : A High-Methionine Diet for One-Week Induces a High Accumulation of Methionine in the Cerebrospinal Fluid and Confers Bipolar Disorder-like Behavior in Mice.

First Author  Ishii I Year  2022
Journal  Int J Mol Sci Volume  23
Issue  2 PubMed ID  35055113
Mgi Jnum  J:320963 Mgi Id  MGI:6861231
Doi  10.3390/ijms23020928 Citation  Ishii I, et al. (2022) A High-Methionine Diet for One-Week Induces a High Accumulation of Methionine in the Cerebrospinal Fluid and Confers Bipolar Disorder-like Behavior in Mice. Int J Mol Sci 23(2)
abstractText  Methionine (Met) is considered the most toxic amino acid in mammals. Here, we investigated biochemical and behavioral impacts of ad libitum one-week feeding of high-Met diets on mice. Adult male mice were fed the standard rodent diet that contained 0.44% Met (1x) or a diet containing 16 graded Met doses (1.2x-13x). High-Met diets for one-week induced a dose-dependent decrease in body weight and an increase in serum Met levels with a 2.55 mM peak (versus basal 53 microM) on the 12xMet diet. Total homocysteine (Hcy) levels were also upregulated while concentrations of other amino acids were almost maintained in serum. Similarly, levels of Met and Hcy (but not the other amino acids) were highly elevated in the cerebrospinal fluids of mice on the 10xMet diet; the Met levels were much higher than Hcy and the others. In a series of behavioral tests, mice on the 10xMet diet displayed increased anxiety and decreased traveled distances in an open-field test, increased activity to escape from water soaking and tail hanging, and normal learning/memory activity in a Y-maze test, which were reflections of negative/positive symptoms and normal cognitive function, respectively. These results indicate that high-Met ad libitum feeding even for a week can induce bipolar disorder-like disease models in mice.
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