The brain’s support cells may play a key role in OCD

The brain's support cells may play a key role in OCD
An astrocyte from the striatum. Credit: Joselyn Soto

A type of cell usually characterized as the brain’s support system appears to play an important role in obsessive-compulsive disorder-related behaviors, according to new UCLA Health research published April 12 in Nature.

The new clue about the brain mechanisms behind OCD, a disorder that is incompletely understood, came as a surprise to researchers. They originally sought to study how interact with star-shaped “helper” cells known as , which are known to provide support and protection to neurons.

However, scientists are still trying to understand the apparent role these complex cells play in psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases.

By studying the proteins expressed by neurons and astrocytes in mice, UCLA researchers found a associated with OCD and repetitive behaviors in neurons was also found in astrocytes. The discovery suggests therapeutic strategies targeting astrocytes and neurons may be useful for OCD and potentially other brain disorders.

“Our research has revealed a new cellular mechanism, which not only involves neurons—something we already knew—but also involves astrocytes, working together,” said corresponding author Baljit Khakh, a professor of physiology and neurobiology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “Now we could expand our research in this area to cover additional mechanisms and cells.”

OCD, a lifelong anxiety disorder characterized by repetitive thoughts and actions, affects an estimated 2-3% of the U.S. population in their lifetimes, though its prevalence may be higher due to underreporting and underdiagnosis. Psychotherapy, antidepressant medication, or both are typically prescribed for OCD, but available treatment is ineffective for a sizable share of patients.

A brain region known as the striatum, which is involved in decision-making and motor control, is thought to play a key role in OCD. That is exactly the area of the brain the UCLA researchers studied when they sought to examine the interactions between astrocytes and neurons.

Khakh is among the researchers in recent years who have extensively studied astrocytes, thanks to technological advances that have made it more feasible to study these complex cells. While previous research has compared between neurons and astrocytes, this new study advanced our understanding of the interplay between the two by analyzing .

“We really have to look at the proteins because they are very complex and diverse,” said co-author Joselyn Soto, a neuroscience Ph.D. student at UCLA’s medical school. “Depending on which cell expresses which proteins, we can predict the functions of that cell.”

The researchers used multiple approaches to isolate and visualize proteins across neurons and astrocytes within the striatum. When they compared proteins found in neurons and astrocytes, they unexpectedly discovered both contained a protein associated with OCD known as SAPAP3.

The researchers tested their findings by inserting the SAPAP3 protein back into neurons and astrocytes of mice that had been genetically modified to lack the gene that makes the protein. They found that the two types of cells interacted in different ways when they measured the protein’s effects on compulsion and anxiety, two of the typical hallmarks of OCD.

The mice no longer compulsively groomed themselves after the SAPAP3 protein was delivered back to astrocytes and neurons, suggesting that both types of cells could be valid targets for treatments aimed at curbing compulsion. However, only neurons with the SAPAP3 protein were associated with reduced anxiety in the mice, suggesting that astrocytes would not be a good target for anxiety treatments in OCD.

Soto said future research would delve deeper into how the interactions between these cells affect behavior.

“These are both major cell types—one doesn’t work without the other,” Soto said. “We really wanted to understand how these multicellular interactions within this brain region give rise to these complex behaviors, including compulsion and anxiety.”

Adding that there needs to be more work to even understand how astrocytes are formed and maintained, Khakh said this new study’s unexpected findings demonstrated the value of pursuing basic biology questions to help form new ideas about the basis of diseases.

“This started from a basic question: What proteins make up this complex cell?” he said. “At the outset, we couldn’t have predicted its potential relevance to OCD.”

More information:
Baljit Khakh, Astrocyte–neuron subproteomes and obsessive compulsive–disorder mechanisms, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05927-7. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05927-7

Citation:
The brain’s support cells may play a key role in OCD (2023, April 12)
retrieved 12 April 2023
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-04-brain-cells-play-key-role.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Read More
Tama Buresh

Latest

Autoglass owner Belron prepares €30bn Amsterdam IPO

For help please visit help.ft.com. We apologise for any inconvenience. The following information can help our support team to resolve this issue. Reason Challenge Request ID 9ed4d4194af15002 Status Code 403

As a small business owner, I never expected to pay $100,000 protecting my business from ransomware

As a small business owner in Columbia, Pa., I have always paid my taxes on time each and every year. My family started Susquehanna Glass in 1910 when my grandfather installed a cutting machine in a shed behind his house. I joined the business in 1975 and spent five dcades growing it into a company

Bank of America’s 18,000 financial advisors just got a new AI tool as the company posts a record quarter

Good morning. Bank of America posted its strongest earnings in nearly two decades, and CFO Alastair Borthwick says AI is becoming key to the bank’s performance. The bank reported on Wednesday that Q1 2026 net income was $8.6 billion, with earnings per share up 25% to $1.11, which is the highest level in almost 20

Justin Sun Blasts World Liberty Financial’s Token Lockup as ‘Governance Scam’

Justin Sun calls WLFI's governance proposal an 'absurd scam' as investors face indefinite token lockups. The Trump crypto project draws fierce backlash. The post Justin Sun Blasts World Liberty Financial’s Token Lockup as ‘Governance Scam’ appeared first on Blockonomi...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Autoglass owner Belron prepares €30bn Amsterdam IPO

For help please visit help.ft.com. We apologise for any inconvenience. The following information can help our support team to resolve this issue. Reason Challenge Request ID 9ed4d4194af15002 Status Code 403

As a small business owner, I never expected to pay $100,000 protecting my business from ransomware

As a small business owner in Columbia, Pa., I have always paid my taxes on time each and every year. My family started Susquehanna Glass in 1910 when my grandfather installed a cutting machine in a shed behind his house. I joined the business in 1975 and spent five dcades growing it into a company

Bank of America’s 18,000 financial advisors just got a new AI tool as the company posts a record quarter

Good morning. Bank of America posted its strongest earnings in nearly two decades, and CFO Alastair Borthwick says AI is becoming key to the bank’s performance. The bank reported on Wednesday that Q1 2026 net income was $8.6 billion, with earnings per share up 25% to $1.11, which is the highest level in almost 20

Justin Sun Blasts World Liberty Financial’s Token Lockup as ‘Governance Scam’

Justin Sun calls WLFI's governance proposal an 'absurd scam' as investors face indefinite token lockups. The Trump crypto project draws fierce backlash. The post Justin Sun Blasts World Liberty Financial’s Token Lockup as ‘Governance Scam’ appeared first on Blockonomi...

Until Then Launches April 23 for Xbox Series

by William D'Angelo , posted 3 hours ago / 369 Views Publisher Maximum Entertainment and developer Polychroma announced the narrative adventure game,  Until Then , will launch for the Xbox Series X|S  on April 23. The game is currently available for the PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, and PC via Steam. View the Xbox release date trailer

SoE necessary but not sufficient, business leaders say

PE­TER CHRISTO­PHER Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt Heavy hand­ed but nec­es­sary giv­en the state of crime in T&T. This was a com­mon as­sess­ment from var­i­ous busi­ness groups when asked for their per­spec­tive on the lat­est de­c­la­ra­tion of a state of emer­gency in the coun­try. The T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, in a re­leased is­sued yes­ter­day

The Big Business of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy

Can a nine-episode limited series really impact an entire season of shopping trends? Today brands are experiencing—and chasing—the “Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy effect” as a result of Ryan Murphy’s Love Story. And in many cases, it’s more pervasive than they could have prepared for. The FX series, based on the relationship between John F. Kennedy Jr. and

‘Mind Your Own Business’: Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over ‘Permission’ To Buy Russian Oil

Updated 8 March 2026 at 18:20 IST Actor and Rajya Sabha MP Kamal Haasan has hit out at US President Donald Trump after America announced that it has given India temporary "permission" to buy Russian oil amid global supply disruptions caused by the Middle East conflict. 'Mind Your Own Business': Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over