<HashMap><database>GEO</database><file_versions><headers><Content-Type>application/xml</Content-Type></headers><body><files><Other>ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/series/GSE336nnn/GSE336230/</Other></files><type>primary</type></body><statusCodeValue>200</statusCodeValue><statusCode>OK</statusCode></file_versions><scores/><additional><omics_type>Transcriptomics</omics_type><species>Homo sapiens</species><gds_type>Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing</gds_type><full_dataset_link>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE336230</full_dataset_link><repository>GEO</repository><entry_type>GSE</entry_type></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Cellular and immunometabolic mechanisms of inflammation in depression: Preliminary findings from single cell RNA sequencing</name><description>Inﬂammation is associated with symptoms of anhedonia, a core feature of major depression (MD). We have shown that MD patients with high inﬂammation as measured by plasma C-reactive protein (CRP) and anhedonia display gene signatures of metabolic reprograming (e.g., shift to glycolysis) necessary to sustain cellular immune activation. To gain preliminary insight into the immune cell subsets and transcriptomic signatures that underlie increased inﬂammation and its relationship with behavior in MD at the single-cell (sc) level, herein we conducted scRNA-Seq on peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a subset of medically-stable, unmedicated MD out-patients. Three MD patients with high CRP (>3 mg/L) before and two weeks after anti-inﬂammatory challenge with the tumor necrosis factor antagonist inﬂiximab and three patients with low CRP (≤3 mg/L) were studied. Cell clusters were identiﬁed using a Single Cell Wizard pipeline, followed by pathway analysis. CD14+ and CD16+ monocytes were more abundant in MD patients with high CRP and were reduced by 29% and 55% respectively after inﬂiximab treatment. Within CD14+ and CD16+ monocytes, genes upregulated in high CRP patients were enriched for inﬂammatory (phagocytosis, complement, leukocyte migration) and immunometa-bolic (hypoxia-inducible factor [HIF]-1, aerobic glycolysis) pathways. Shifts in CD4+ T cell subsets included ~30% and ~10% lower abundance of CD4+ central memory (TCM) and naïve cells and ~50% increase in effector memory-like (TEM-like) cells in high versus low CRP patients. TCM cells of high CRP patients displayed down-regulation of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) pathway, a main energy source in this cell type. Following inﬂiximab, changes in the number of CD14+ monocytes and CD4+ TEM-like cells predicted improve-ments in anhedonia scores (r = 1.0, p &lt; 0.001). In sum, monocytes and CD4+ T cells from MD patients with increased inﬂammation exhibited immunometabolic reprograming in association with symptoms of anhedonia. These ﬁndings are the ﬁrst step toward determining the cellular and molecular immune pathways associated with inﬂammatory phenotypes in MD, which may lead to novel immunomodulatory treatments of psychiatric illnesses with increased inﬂammation.</description><dates><publication>2026/06/23</publication></dates><accession>GSE336230</accession><cross_references><GSM>GSM9830409</GSM><GSM>GSM9830410</GSM><GSM>GSM9830411</GSM><GSM>GSM9830412</GSM><GSM>GSM9830413</GSM><GSM>GSM9830405</GSM><GSM>GSM9830406</GSM><GSM>GSM9830407</GSM><GSM>GSM9830408</GSM><GPL>20301</GPL><GSE>336230</GSE><taxon>Homo sapiens</taxon></cross_references></HashMap>