
Psychiatr News November 7, 2008
Volume 43, Number 21, page 20
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
When Sunlight Dwindles, So Do Serotonin Transporters
Joan Arehart-Treichel
An inverse, seasonal relationship in the brain between the nerve
transmitter serotonin and serotonin transporters may be linked to seasonal
changes in mood.
It is well known that people tend to feel happier and more energetic in the
spring and summer when there are more hours of daylight, and to feel more
gloomy and lethargic in the fall and winter when daylight hours are reduced.
The nerve transmitter serotonin seems largely to explain such mood
fluctuations: more of it is present in the brain in the spring and summer than
in the fall and winter.
But why is more serotonin present in the brain in the spring and summer?
One answer seems to have been found by Canadian and Austrian researchers:
proteins called serotonin transporters, which deprive nerves of the
"feel good" nerve transmitter serotonin, are more plentiful in the
brain during the fall and winter than during the spring and summer.
Jeffrey Meyer, M.D., Ph.D., head of neurochemical imaging in mood disorders
at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health at the University of Toronto,
and colleagues used PET scans to assess the number of serotonin transporters
in the brains of 88 mentally and physically healthy subjects from 1999 through
2003. They found significantly more transporters in all parts of the subjects'
brains in the fall and winter than in the spring and summer.
This is the first time, it appears, that such a seasonal change in brain
physiology has been found in any species, Meyer told Psychiatric
News. Moreover, "the robustness of the results was quite
surprising." Thus, there seems to be an inverse seasonal relationship
between serotonin and serotonin transporters, and serotonin transporters may
well serve as seasonal switches for serotonin and mood, Meyer and his
colleagues concluded in the September Archives of General
Psychiatry.
But if serotonin transporters act as seasonal switches for serotonin and
mood, what controls the transporters? Sunlight, Meyer and his colleagues
suspect, because they also found significant inverse links between the number
of transporters in subjects' brains and the average duration of daily sunlight
and day length. Yet other environmental factors might play a role as well,
they believe. For example, their preliminary results also suggest that
humidity is an influence, but that temperature is not. Indeed, their next
goal, Meyer explained, will be "to understand in detail how environment
influences serotonin transporters and then to develop strategies to interfere
with this [influence] so as to minimize the adverse effects of seasonal change
upon mood in people."
Meyer and his team have also made another interesting discovery: the
genetic composition of the gene that codes for the serotonin transporter
influences the number of serotonin transporters in the brain, but not as much
as sunlight duration does. So, one might tentatively conclude that sunlight
duration has an even greater impact on mood than the genetic composition of
the serotonin transporter gene
does.
Finally, the findings raise some provocative questions—for instance,
might the ebb in serotonin transporters that transpires in the spring
contribute to the spring peak in suicides in the northern hemisphere? On the
surface, the idea doesn't make much sense, they admitted, since fewer
transporters should mean more available serotonin, and more available
serotonin should mean a more elevated mood and more energy. But animal
research, they pointed out, has shown that a short-term depletion of serotonin
transporters in one area of the brain can temporarily reduce the amount of
serotonin available in other brain areas. Such a temporary imbalance, they
speculated, might explain why suicides tend to peak in the spring.
The study was funded by the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia
and Depression, the Austrian Science Foundation, the Canadian Institute for
Health Research, the Ontario Mental Health Foundation, the Canada Foundation
for Innovation, and the Ontario Innovation Trust.
An abstract of "Seasonal Variation in Human Brain Serotonin
Transporter Binding" is posted at
<http://archpsyc.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/65/9/1072>.
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