Dr Alastair Dobbin writes on mental health and brain health

New Research in Mental Health and Brain Health

New research methods are changing how we understand mental health and wellbeing. One of the most important is Mendelian randomisation, a technique that goes right back to the work of Gregor Mendel, the monk who bred thousands of pea plants and uncovered the basic laws of inheritance in the 19th century.

Today, by using naturally occurring genetic differences as “tiny randomised trials”, Mendelian randomisation helps scientists work out which factors actually cause mental and physical health problems, rather than just being associated with them [1–4]. It has already clarified links between inflammation and depression and between mental disorders and physical conditions like cardiovascular disease [3–4].

This new way of working with very large datasets has opened the door to more targeted, genuinely causally-informed treatments for mental and brain disorders.

A Hopeful Breakthrough for Alzheimer’s Disease

One recent line of research that caught my eye concerns Alzheimer’s dementia (AD), one of the most devastating conditions for individuals and families. Alzheimer’s gradually robs people of their memory, identity and independence, and places a huge emotional and practical burden on partners, children and carers. The human and economic costs are enormous.

A key player in Alzheimer’s is the blood–brain barrier (BBB), a protective wall of tightly connected endothelial cells, sealed with special “locking” proteins. This barrier normally prevents toxic, inflammatory substances in the blood from leaking into the brain. In Alzheimer’s, the BBB becomes leaky and beta-amyloid, a sticky protein, accumulates around brain cells. Over time these proteins clump into larger plaques and fibrils, damaging tiny blood vessels and starving memory cells in regions such as the hippocampus.

Recently, researchers used engineered nanoparticles in mouse models of Alzheimer’s to repair the blood–brain barrier and boost the brain’s own ability to clear beta-amyloid. Within hours, amyloid levels dropped sharply in the brain and rose in the blood, showing that the brain was successfully exporting these toxic proteins [5–6]. Over weeks and months, the treated mice showed marked recovery in memory and behaviour.

This is still animal research, and mice are not humans. But it’s a striking proof-of-concept: instead of just attacking amyloid directly, we may be able to restore the brain’s own defences and waste-clearance systems. That gives real grounds for cautious optimism.

Protecting the Brain from Stress and Inflammation

While we wait for these Alzheimer’s breakthroughs to filter through to real-world treatments, there are things we already know help protect the brain.

Chronic stress and depression are associated with inflammation in the brain and body, which, over time, can damage brain function and increase the risk of both mental and physical illness [7]. Mendelian randomisation and large cohort studies have started to show causal links between inflammatory markers and depression, not just simple correlation [3,7].

The good news is: positive psychological wellbeing appears to be linked to lower levels of inflammatory biomarkers. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis found that people with higher positive psychological wellbeing (positive emotions, optimism, meaning, etc.) tended to have lower circulating inflammatory markers [8].

Our own work with Positive Mental Training has shown that training in positive imagery, relaxation and resilience can increase positive emotions, reduce anxiety and depression, and support recovery in a range of groups [9].

Put simply: shifting the balance of everyday emotions towards the positive, even modestly, may help to reduce inflammation, support brain health, and make us more resilient to stress.

So while we wait for the Alzheimer’s “nanoparticle jab” and other advanced treatments to reach clinics, there is value in everyday protective habits: improving sleep, practising emotional skills that increase positive mood, and using tools like Positive Mental Training or similar wellbeing interventions. You are likely to feel better, sleep better, and function better; that is already a meaningful form of brain protection.

A Lesson from Francis Crick

The history of science also reminds us that breakthroughs often come from people who don’t follow the “standard” path. Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, didn’t come from an academic family, didn’t get into Oxbridge, graduated with a second-class degree, did very little formal teaching and only ever wrote one grant application. Yet he excelled at spotting important new ideas and, crucially, at recognising when he was wrong and changing course.

In an era of rapid progress in neuroscience, genetics and mental health research, that may be the most important lesson of all — to stay curious, open-minded, and ready to revise our views as better evidence emerges.