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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Genetic variation in
dysbindin
(DTNBP1: dystrobrevin-binding protein 1) has recently been shown to be associated with
schizophrenia
. The
dysbindin
gene is located at chromosome 6p22.3, one of the most promising susceptibility loci in
schizophrenia
linkage studies. We attempted to replicate this association in a Japanese sample of 670 patients with
schizophrenia
and 588 controls. We found a nominally significant association with
schizophrenia
for four single nucleotide polymorphisms and stronger evidence for association in a multi-marker haplotype analysis (P = 0.00028). We then explored functions of
dysbindin
protein in primary cortical neuronal culture. Overexpression of
dysbindin
induced the expression of two pre-synaptic proteins, SNAP25 and synapsin I, and increased extracellular basal glutamate levels and release of glutamate evoked by high potassium. Conversely, knockdown of endogenous
dysbindin
protein by small interfering RNA (siRNA) resulted in the reduction of pre-synaptic protein expression and glutamate release, suggesting that
dysbindin
might influence exocytotic glutamate release via upregulation of the molecules in pre-synaptic machinery. The overexpression of
dysbindin
increased phosphorylation of Akt protein and protected cortical neurons against neuronal death due to serum deprivation and these effects were blocked by LY294002, a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) inhibitor. SiRNA-mediated silencing of
dysbindin
protein diminished Akt phosphorylation and facilitated neuronal death induced by serum deprivation, suggesting that
dysbindin
promotes neuronal viability through PI3-kinase-Akt signaling. Genetic variants associated with impairments of these functions of
dysbindin
could play an important role in the pathogenesis of
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Evidence of novel neuronal functions of dysbindin, a susceptibility gene for schizophrenia. 1534 6
Schizophrenia
is a complex, debilitating neuropsychiatric disorder. Epidemiological, clinical, neuropsychological, and neurophysiological studies have provided substantial evidence that abnormalities in brain development and ongoing neuroplasticity play important roles in the pathogenesis of the disorder. Complementing these clinical studies, a range of cytoarchitectural, morphometric, ultrastructural, immunochemical, and gene expression methods have been applied in investigations of postmortem brain tissues to characterize the cellular and molecular profile of putative developmental and plastic abnormalities in
schizophrenia
. While findings have been diverse and many are in need of replication, investigations focusing on higher cortical and limbic brain regions are increasingly demonstrating abnormalities in the structural and molecular integrity of the synaptic complex as well as glutamate-related receptors and signal transduction pathways that play critical roles in brain development, synaptogenesis, and synaptic plasticity. Most exciting have been recent associations of
schizophrenia
with specific genes, such as neuregulin-1,
dysbindin
-1, and AKT-1, which are vital to synaptic development, neurotransmission, and plasticity.
...
PMID:Neurodevelopment, neuroplasticity, and new genes for schizophrenia. 1558 15
Neurodevelopmental models of
schizophrenia
that identify longitudinal precursors of illness have been of great heuristic importance focusing most etiologic research over the past two decades. These models have varied considerably with respect to specificity and timing of hypothesized genetic and environmental 'hits', but have largely focused on insults to prenatal brain development. With heritability around 80%, nongenetic factors impairing development must also be part of the model, and any model must also account for the wide range of age of onset. In recent years, longitudinal brain imaging studies of both early and adult (to distinguish from late ie elderly) onset populations indicate that progressive brain changes are more dynamic than previously thought, with gray matter volume loss particularly striking in adolescence and appearing to be an exaggeration of the normal developmental pattern. This supports an extended time period of abnormal neurodevelopment in
schizophrenia
in addition to earlier 'lesions'. Many subtle cognitive, motor, and behavioral deviations are seen years before illness onset, and these are more prominent in early onset cases. Moreover,
schizophrenia
susceptibility genes and chromosomal abnormalities, particularly as examined for early onset populations (ie GAD1, 22q11DS), are associated with premorbid neurodevelopmental abnormalities. Several candidate genes for
schizophrenia
(eg
dysbindin
) are associated with lower cognitive abilities in both schizophrenic and other pediatric populations more generally. Postmortem human brain and developmental animal studies document multiple and diverse effects of developmental genes (including
schizophrenia
susceptibility genes), at sequential stages of brain development. These may underlie the broad array of premorbid cognitive and behavioral abnormalities seen in
schizophrenia
, and neurodevelopmental disorders more generally. Increased specificity for the most relevant environmental risk factors such as exposure to prenatal infection, and their interaction with susceptibility genes and/or action through phase-specific altered gene expression now both strengthen and modify the neurodevelopmental theory of
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:The neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia: update 2005. 1570 48
The DTNBP1 gene, encoding
dysbindin
, is now generally considered to be a susceptibility gene for
schizophrenia
. However, the confidence with which this hypothesis can be held has to be tempered by the poor reproducibility between studies in terms of the exact nature of the associated haplotypes, by the failure so far to identify any specific susceptibility variants and by the absence of any demonstrated function associated with any of the risk haplotypes. In the present study, we show that a defined
schizophrenia
risk haplotype tags one or more cis-acting variants that results in a relative reduction in DTNBP1 mRNA expression in human cerebral cortex. Subsidiary analyses suggest that risk haplotypes identified in other sample groups of white European ancestry also index lower DTNBP1 expression, whereas putative 'protective' haplotypes index high DTNBP1 expression. Our data indicate that variation in the DTNBP1 gene confers susceptibility to
schizophrenia
through reduced expression, and that this, therefore, represents a primary aetiological mechanism in the disorder.
...
PMID:Haplotypes at the dystrobrevin binding protein 1 (DTNBP1) gene locus mediate risk for schizophrenia through reduced DTNBP1 expression. 1591 70
Genetic epidemiological studies suggest that individual variation in susceptibility to
schizophrenia
is largely genetic, reflecting alleles of moderate to small effect in multiple genes. Molecular genetic studies have identified several potential regions of linkage and two associated chromosomal abnormalities, and evidence is accumulating in favour of several positional candidate genes. Currently, the positional candidate genes for which we consider the evidence to be strong are those encoding
dysbindin
(DTNBP1) and neuregulin 1 (NRG1). For other genes, disrupted in schizophrenia 1 (DISC1), D-amino-acid oxidase (DAO), D-amino-acid oxidase activator (DAOA, formerly known as G72) and regulator of G-protein signalling 4 (RGS4), the data are promising but not yet compelling. The identification of these, and other susceptibility genes, will open up new avenues for research aimed at understanding the pathogenesis of
schizophrenia
, and will catalyse a re-appraisal of the classification of psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:Schizophrenia: genes at last? 1600 49
Genome-scans performed in
schizophrenia
families have provided evidence for region 6p24-21 where variability may confer susceptibility to
schizophrenia
. Recent studies have implicated that gene DTNBP1 (
dysbindin
) in this region is strongly associated with
schizophrenia
. In a family based association study we investigated three markers located in the untranslated region of the DTNBP1 gene: rs909706, rs1047631 and rs742106. The sample size of our study is 117 families. No biased transmission towards the disorder was detected by haplotype analysis using TRANSMIT.
...
PMID:Untranslated region haplotype in dysbindin gene: analysis in schizophrenia. 1613 86
The high pathogenetic relevance of genetic factors in
schizophrenia
is beyond doubt based on the findings of epidemiological studies. By means of a complex mode of transmission, it is likely that several genes with weak to moderate effect jointly constitute a genetic basis for a vulnerability to
schizophrenia
that may well vary for different individuals. Other organic and psychosocial factors also play an individually different -- in some cases significant -- role in terms of pathogenesis, as a result of which an oligogenic/polygenic multifactor model is assumed from the standpoint of aetiopathogenetics. Molecular genetic methods consist in linkage analyses and association analyses. Positive linkage findings accumulate particularly for the chromosomes 1q, 6p, 8p, 13q and 22q. By themselves, individual mutations contribute little to the range of schizophrenic feature characteristics, it was not possible -- irrespective of some subtypes -- to replicate genes of major effect. From the large number of possible candidate genes, although studies on DRD3, DRD2 and HTR2A produced positive results, the magnitudes of effect were low. The findings for alleles of
dysbindin
, neuregulin 1, DAO, COMT, PRODH, ZDHHC and DISC are less clear. The search for
schizophrenia
-relevant mutations is hampered by the possibility of a heterogeneous phenotype of
schizophrenia
in case of a homogeneous genotype as much as by the possibility of inter-individually homogeneous phenotypical characteristics in case of
schizophrenia
-relevant heterotype in the genome. With the aid of the concept of endo-phenotypes, based on neurobiological phenomena, it might be possible to take a more direct approach that leads from relevant mutations to the risk of schizophrenias. However, replacing schizophrenic alienation with neurobiological aspects leads to difficulties in explaining these complex disorder profiles. Schizophrenic diseases require an explanatory approach that also incorporates personality and developmental psychological aspects from the outset, if the aim is not to restrict type of schizophrenic disease exclusively to loci of molecular genetic changes.
...
PMID:[Genetic risk factors in schizophrenia]. 1627 Feb 44
Straub et al. (2002) recently identified the 6p22.3 gene
dysbindin
(DTNBP1) through positional cloning as a
schizophrenia
susceptibility gene. We studied a rare cohort of 102 children with onset of psychosis before age 13. Standardized ratings of early development, medication response, neuropsychological and cognitive performance, premorbid dysfunction and clinical follow-up were obtained. Fourteen SNPs were genotyped in the gene DTNBP1. Family-based pairwise and haplotype transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) analysis with the clinical phenotype, and quantitative transmission disequilibrium test (QTDT) explored endophenotype relationships. One SNP was associated with diagnosis (TDT p=.01). The QTDT analyses showed several significant relationships. Four adjacent SNPs were associated (p values=.0009-.003) with poor premorbid functioning. These findings support the hypothesis that this and other
schizophrenia
susceptibility genes contribute to early neurodevelopmental impairment.
...
PMID:Dysbindin (DTNBP1, 6p22.3) is associated with childhood-onset psychosis and endophenotypes measured by the Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS). 1628 82
It has been conventional for psychiatric research, including the search for predisposing genes, to proceed under the assumption that
schizophrenia
and bipolar disorder are separate disease entities with different underlying etiologies. These represent Emil Kraepelin's traditional dichotomous classification of the so-called "functional" psychoses and form the basis of modern diagnostic practice. However, findings emerging from many fields of psychiatric research do not fit well with this model. In particular, the pattern of findings emerging from genetic studies shows increasing evidence for an overlap in genetic susceptibility across the traditional classification categories-including association findings at DAOA(G72), DTNBP1 (
dysbindin
), COMT, BDNF, DISC1, and NRG1. The emerging evidence suggests the possibility of relatively specific relationships between genotype and psychopathology. For example, DISC1 and NRG1 may confer susceptibility to a form of illness with mixed features of
schizophrenia
and mania. The elucidation of genotype-phenotype relationships is at an early stage, but current findings highlight the need to consider alternative approaches to classification and conceptualization for psychiatric research rather than continuing to rely heavily on the traditional Kraepelinian dichotomy. As psychosis susceptibility genes are identified and characterized over the next few years, this will have a major impact on our understanding of disease pathophysiology and will lead to changes in classification and the clinical practice of psychiatry.
...
PMID:Genes for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder? Implications for psychiatric nosology. 1631 75
DTNBP1 (
dysbindin
) is one of the several putative
schizophrenia
genes supported by association, neuroanatomical, and cellular studies. These suggest an involvement of DTNBP1 in the prefrontal cortex and cognitive functions mediated by interaction with neurotransmitter systems, in particular glutamate. The influence of DTNBP1 gene variation on prefrontal brain function at the systemic neurophysiological level, though, has not been characterized. The NoGo-anteriorization (NGA) as an event-related potential (ERP) measure elicited during the continuous performance test (CPT) has been established as a valid neurophysiological parameter for prefrontal brain function in healthy individuals and patients with schizophrenias. In the present study, we therefore investigated the influence of eight
dysbindin
gene variants on the NGA as a marker of prefrontal brain function in 48 healthy individuals. Two DTNBP1 polymorphisms previously linked to
schizophrenia
(P1765 and P1320) were found associated with changes in the NGA. Post hoc analysis showing an influence of genetic variation at these loci on the Go centroid and frontal amplitudes suggest that this might be due to modification of the execution of motor processes by the prefrontal cortex. This is the first report on a role of DTNBP1 gene variation for prefrontal brain function at a systemic neurophysiological level in healthy humans. Future studies will have to address the relevance of this observation for patients with schizophrenias.
...
PMID:DTNBP1 (dysbindin) gene variants modulate prefrontal brain function in healthy individuals. 1640
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