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Diet and depression: exploring the biological mechanisms of action.

Abstract
The field of nutritional psychiatry has generated observational and efficacy data supporting a role for healthy dietary patterns in depression onset and symptom management. To guide future clinical trials and targeted dietary therapies, this review provides an overview of what is currently known regarding underlying mechanisms of action by which diet may influence mental and brain health. The mechanisms of action associating diet with health outcomes are complex, multifaceted, interacting, and not restricted to any one biological pathway. Numerous pathways were identified through which diet could plausibly affect mental health. These include modulation of pathways involved in inflammation, oxidative stress, epigenetics, mitochondrial dysfunction, the gut microbiota, tryptophan-kynurenine metabolism, the HPA axis, neurogenesis and BDNF, epigenetics, and obesity. However, the nascent nature of the nutritional psychiatry field to date means that the existing literature identified in this review is largely comprised of preclinical animal studies. To fully identify and elucidate complex mechanisms of action, intervention studies that assess markers related to these pathways within clinically diagnosed human populations are needed.
AuthorsWolfgang Marx, Melissa Lane, Meghan Hockey, Hajara Aslam, Michael Berk, Ken Walder, Alessandra Borsini, Joseph Firth, Carmine M Pariante, Kirsten Berding, John F Cryan, Gerard Clarke, Jeffrey M Craig, Kuan-Pin Su, David Mischoulon, Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, Jane A Foster, Patrice D Cani, Sandrine Thuret, Heidi M Staudacher, Almudena Sánchez-Villegas, Husnain Arshad, Tasnime Akbaraly, Adrienne O'Neil, Toby Segasby, Felice N Jacka
JournalMolecular psychiatry (Mol Psychiatry) Vol. 26 Issue 1 Pg. 134-150 (01 2021) ISSN: 1476-5578 [Electronic] England
PMID33144709 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Review)
Topics
  • Animals
  • Depression (genetics, metabolism, physiopathology)
  • Diet (psychology)
  • Epigenesis, Genetic
  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome
  • Humans
  • Inflammation
  • Oxidative Stress

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