Crippling anxiety suffered by obese people could be halted by a drug cocktail that ‘wipes out dangerous ZOMBIE cells thought to hamper their mental health’
- ‘Zombie cells’ have been shown to accumulate in the brains of obese people
- Also known as senescent cells, they are alive but do not function properly
- In dangerously overweight mice, the cells trigger anxious behaviours
Removing ‘zombie cells’ may treat anxiety in obese patients, research suggests.
Senescent cells are alive but non-functioning and have been shown to accumulate in the brains of people carrying dangerous amounts of weight.
To test a long-held theory they may affect mental health, researchers gave obese mice a cocktail of the cancer drug Sprycel (dasatinib) and the plant supplement quercetin – both of which are known to trigger suicide in senescent cells.
After two months, the senescent cells in the rodents’ brains had cleared and been replaced with healthy tissue, with the animals also showing reduced signs of anxiety.
The researchers hope these medications – known as senolytic drugs – may lead to a new way of treating obese anxiety sufferers.
Removing ‘zombie cells’ may treat anxiety in obese patients, research suggests (stock)
The study was carried out by researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Newcastle University.
It was led by PhD student Mikolaj Ogrodnik, from Newcastle, who is investigating the role of dietary interventions on liver senescence.
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NHS statistics reveal almost 15,000 hospital admissions for stress or anxiety were carried out in 2017/18 – up from just 11,500 in 2007/08.
Obesity is also on the rise, with 26 per cent of adults carrying dangerous amounts of weight in 2016, compared to only 13.2 per cent of men and 16.4 per cent of women in 1993.
Anxiety is a leading cause of depression, poor quality of life and even suicide in obese patients, with no specific treatment being available for those carrying too much weight, the authors wrote in the journal Cell Metabolism.
‘Our data demonstrating a link between obesity, senescence and anxiety-like behavior provide critical support for the potential feasibility of administering senolytics to treat obesity-associated anxiety-like behavior,’ they added.
Senescent cells are semi-dormant, meaning they are alive but not doing their job.
They also prevent surrounding cells from carrying out their usual functions.
Obesity has also been linked to a greater ‘senescent burden’, as well as a higher risk of anxiety, the authors wrote.
They investigated this link by looking at mice that were genetically modified to be at-risk of obesity.
The rodents were either fed a diet where 60 per cent of their calories came from fat or were given a standard eating regimen for two months.
To measure anxiety, the animals were exposed to open spaces to see whether they stayed near the walls or corners of the pen.
The researchers then looked at cells in the region of the mices’ brains known as the lateral ventricle – where new brain cells are made.
Results revealed a higher proportion of senescent cells in obese mice compared to those of a healthy weight.
When both sized rodents were given dasatinib and quercetin, the medications triggered suicide in the senescent cells and the mice’s anxious behaviours were reduced.
The senolytic drugs also removed senescent cells from the rodents’ brains, which were replaced with normal tissue.
When the researchers analysed the mice’s blood samples, they found higher levels of anti-inflammatory markers in the animals treated with senolytic drugs.
Inflammation has been linked to anxiety.
The researchers believe senolytic drugs may be a worthwhile therapy to explore for obese patients with anxiety.
Approved medications include the plant supplement fisetin and the lymphoma drug navitoclax.
But, they stress, further studies are required to determine the specific type of senescent cells involved in the mental-health condition.
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