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Episode 93

Exploring the Link Between Genetics and Brain Metabolism in Psychiatry with Dr. Harry Pantazopoulos

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Exploring the Link Between Genetics and Brain Metabolism in Psychiatry with Dr. Harry Pantazopoulos

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About the host

Bret Scher, MD

Bret Scher, MD

Medical Director, Metabolic Mind and Baszucki Group

Bret Scher, MD

Medical Director, Metabolic Mind and Baszucki Group

Bret is the host of the Metabolic Mind YouTube channel and podcast. He is a board-certified cardiologist, lipidologist, and leading expert in therapeutic uses of metabolic therapies, including ketogenic diets. Prior to joining Baszucki Group, Bret was the medical director at DietDoctor.com, an online platform promoting improving metabolic health through low-carb nutrition, where he was a content creator and medical reviewer. Earlier in his career, he worked as a cardiologist in San Diego. Bret has spent most of his 20-year career as a preventive cardiologist, helping people improve their metabolic health and preventing heart disease using low-carb nutrition and lifestyle interventions. His deep passion for educating the public about the benefits of metabolic therapies grew from his experience with the prevailing medical teaching, which frequently misrepresents nutrition science and undervalues metabolic health. Bret received an MD from The Ohio State University College of Medicine and a BS in Biology from Stanford University. He grew up in San Diego and began competing in triathlons at an early age, which helped fuel his love of health and fitness. He continues to enjoy spending time outdoors mountain biking, swimming, hiking, and playing baseball with his two boys.
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About the guest

Harry Pantazopoulos, MD

Harry Pantazopoulos, MD

Associate Professor, Psychiatry and Human Behavior

Harry Pantazopoulos, MD

Associate Professor, Psychiatry and Human Behavior

Dr Harry Pantazopoulos is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomical Sciences at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi. He completed his PhD in circadian neurobiology at Northeastern University. His research is focused on the circadian rhythm disruption in mood disorders and the extracellular matrix in psychiatric disorders. He was a junior faculty member at Harvard Medical School, and subsequently a faculty member at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
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Key Highlights

  • Researchers studied gene expression in the amygdala using postmortem brain samples from people with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depression to look at metabolic pathways.
  • Results showed clear differences: bipolar brains had higher glucose metabolism, schizophrenia showed lower nucleotide metabolism, and major depression showed reduced mitochondrial energy production.
  • These findings suggest potential dietary strategies: ketogenic diets may help in bipolar by reducing glucose-driven overactivity, while nucleotide-rich foods (like organ meats, fish, legumes) could support schizophrenia.
  • Inflammation and circadian rhythm changes also showed up in bipolar samples, tying metabolism, immune function, and daily rhythms closely together.
  • Future steps include testing these patterns in living subjects, studying how medications interact with metabolism, and exploring treatments such as ketogenic therapy, nutrient-rich diets, and ATPase inhibitors.

Transcript

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