QSAR modeling and transmission electron microscopy stereology of altered mitochondrial ultrastructure of white blood cells in patients diagnosed as schizophrenic and treated with antipsychotic drugs.
Author: Inuwa IM, Peet M, Williams MA.
Source:
Biotechnic & Histochemistry, 80(3-4), 133-137.
Treatment of patients diagnosed as schizophrenic with antipsychotic drugs
(neuroleptics) is known to cause occasional unexplained depletion of white blood
cells, especially neutrophil granulocytes. It has been known for many years that
neuroleptics can interfere with the mitochondrial respiratory chain in vitro.
Because there has been a growing interest recently in mitochondrial targeting of
drugs, and since a quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) model that
predicts mitochondrial accumulation of neuroleptics has been published, we
investigated the effects of neuroleptics on white blood cell mitochondriVenous
blood samples were collected from both patients undergoing treatment with
neuroleptics and healthy volunteers. The samples were processed for transmission
electron microscopy. The resulting images of white blood cells were analyzed
using stereology to compare quantitatively mitochondrial morphology in the
patient and control groups. We found that in patients, but not in controls, there
was swelling of mitochondria and fragmentation of the mitochondrial cristae.
There also were fewer mitochondria in patients than in controls, although due to
the swelling of the organelles, the volume density of mitochondria in the two
groups was not significantly different. Such changes are typical of a toxic
insult. Consequently, it seems plausible that, since schizophrenia is not a
disease considered to affect white blood cells per se, these changes probably are
due to the medication.