1 Psychiatry Res 2002 Dec 113: 59-67
PMID 12467946
Title Association study of polymorphisms in the GluR6 kainate receptor gene (GRIK2) with schizophrenia.
Abstract The glutamatergic dysfunction hypothesis ofschizophreniasuggests genes involved in glutamatergic transmission as candidates forschizophrenia-susceptibility genes. The GluR6 kainate receptor geneGRIK2is located on chromosome 6q16.3-q21, aschizophrenia易感区域,建议乘iple linkage studies. We examined 15 SNPs evenly distributed in the entireGRIK2region (>700 kb) in Japanese patients withschizophrenia(n=100) and controls (n=100). Neither genotype nor allele frequency showed a significant association with the disorder. We constructed 2-SNP haplotypes from the 15 SNPs. Although we observed three long linkage disequilibrium blocks (>150 kb) within theGRIK2region, none of the pairwise haplotypes showed a significant association with the disorder. Therefore, we conclude thatGRIK2does not play a major role in the pathogenesis ofschizophreniain the Japanese population.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
2 Neuroreport 2004 Aug 15: 1987-91
PMID 15305151
Title Maternal transmission disequilibrium of the glutamate receptor GRIK2 in schizophrenia.
Abstract schizophreniais characterized by thought disorders, hallucinations and delusions. Genetic studies have shown a high linkage at chromosome 6q16-21. Among the genes located in this region is the glutamate receptor ionotropic kainate 2 gene (GRIK2or GLUR6), a functional candidate for susceptibility toschizophrenia。In this study, transmission ofGRIK2was evaluated in 356schizophrenicpatients from three different clinical centers. Whereas paternal transmission shows equilibrium, we observed maternal transmission disequilibrium ofGRIK2in the largest population (p=0.03), which was still significant when all populations were added (p=0.05). These results are similar to the maternalGRIK2transmission disequilibrium previously reported for autism, and support the presence of a susceptibility gene forschizophreniaat 6q16.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
3 Neuroreport 2004 Aug 15: 1987-91
PMID 15305151
Title Maternal transmission disequilibrium of the glutamate receptor GRIK2 in schizophrenia.
Abstract schizophreniais characterized by thought disorders, hallucinations and delusions. Genetic studies have shown a high linkage at chromosome 6q16-21. Among the genes located in this region is the glutamate receptor ionotropic kainate 2 gene (GRIK2or GLUR6), a functional candidate for susceptibility toschizophrenia。In this study, transmission ofGRIK2was evaluated in 356schizophrenicpatients from three different clinical centers. Whereas paternal transmission shows equilibrium, we observed maternal transmission disequilibrium ofGRIK2in the largest population (p=0.03), which was still significant when all populations were added (p=0.05). These results are similar to the maternalGRIK2transmission disequilibrium previously reported for autism, and support the presence of a susceptibility gene forschizophreniaat 6q16.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
4 J. Neurochem. 2005 Jul 94: 324-36
PMID 15998284
Title Histone methylation at gene promoters is associated with developmental regulation and region-specific expression of ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors in human brain.
Abstract Glutamatergic signaling is regulated, in part, through differential expression of NMDA and AMPA/KA channel subunits and G protein-coupled metabotropic receptors. In human brain, region-specific expression patterns of glutamate receptor genes are maintained over the course of decades, suggesting a role for molecular mechanisms involved in long-term regulation of transcription, including methylation of lysine residues at histone N-terminal tails. Using a native chromatin immunoprecipitation assay, we studied histone methylation marks at proximal promoters of 16 ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptor genes (GRIN1,2A-D; GRIA1,3,4;GRIK2,4,5; GRM1,3,4,6,7 ) in cerebellar cortex collected across a wide age range from midgestation to 90 years old. Levels of di- and trimethylated histone H3-lysine 4, which are associated with open chromatin and transcription, showed significant differences between promoters and a robust correlation with corresponding mRNA levels in immature and mature cerebellar cortex. In contrast, levels of trimethylated H3-lysine 27 and H4-lysine 20, two histone modifications defining silenced or condensed chromatin, did not correlate with transcription but were up-regulated overall in adult cerebellum. Furthermore, differential gene expression patterns in prefrontal and cerebellar cortex were reflected by similar differences in H3-lysine 4 methylation at promoters. Together, these findings suggest that histone lysine methylation at gene promoters is involved in developmental regulation and maintenance of region-specific expression patterns of ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors. The association of a specific epigenetic mark, H3-(methyl)-lysine 4, with the molecular architecture of glutamatergic signaling in human brain has potential implications forschizophreniaand other disorders with altered glutamate receptor function.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
5 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2007 Jun 104: 10164-9
PMID 17553960
Title Regulation of the GABA cell phenotype in hippocampus of schizophrenics and bipolars.
Abstract GABAergic dysfunction is present in the hippocampus inschizophrenia(深圳)和双相情感障碍(BD)。三突触pathway was "deconstructed" into various layers of sectors CA3/2 and CA1 and gene expression profiling performed. Network association analysis was used to uncover genes that may be related to regulation of glutamate decarboxylase 67 (GAD(67)), a marker for this system that has been found by many studies to show decreased expression in SZs and BDs. The most striking change was a down-regulation of GAD(67) in the stratum oriens (SO) of CA2/3 in both groups; CA1 only showed changes in the SO ofschizophrenics. The network generated for GAD(67) contained 25 genes involved in the regulation of kainate receptors, TGF-beta and Wnt signaling, as well as transcription factors involved in cell growth and differentiation. In SZs, IL-1beta, (GRIK2/3), TGF-beta2, TGF-betaR1, histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1), death associated protein (DAXX), and cyclin D2 (CCND2) were all significantly up-regulated, whereas in BDs, PAX5, Runx2, LEF1, TLE1, and CCND2 were significantly down-regulated. In the SO of CA1 of BDs, where GAD67 showed no expression change, TGF-beta and Wnt signaling genes were all up-regulated, but other transcription factors showed no change in expression. In other layers/sectors, BDs showed no expression changes in these GAD(67) network genes. Overall, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that decreased expression of GAD(67) may be associated with an epigenetic mechanism in SZ. In BD, however, a suppression of transcription factors involved in cell differentiation may contribute to GABA dysfunction.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
6 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2007 Jun 104: 10164-9
PMID 17553960
Title Regulation of the GABA cell phenotype in hippocampus of schizophrenics and bipolars.
Abstract GABAergic dysfunction is present in the hippocampus inschizophrenia(深圳)和双相情感障碍(BD)。三突触pathway was "deconstructed" into various layers of sectors CA3/2 and CA1 and gene expression profiling performed. Network association analysis was used to uncover genes that may be related to regulation of glutamate decarboxylase 67 (GAD(67)), a marker for this system that has been found by many studies to show decreased expression in SZs and BDs. The most striking change was a down-regulation of GAD(67) in the stratum oriens (SO) of CA2/3 in both groups; CA1 only showed changes in the SO ofschizophrenics. The network generated for GAD(67) contained 25 genes involved in the regulation of kainate receptors, TGF-beta and Wnt signaling, as well as transcription factors involved in cell growth and differentiation. In SZs, IL-1beta, (GRIK2/3), TGF-beta2, TGF-betaR1, histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1), death associated protein (DAXX), and cyclin D2 (CCND2) were all significantly up-regulated, whereas in BDs, PAX5, Runx2, LEF1, TLE1, and CCND2 were significantly down-regulated. In the SO of CA1 of BDs, where GAD67 showed no expression change, TGF-beta and Wnt signaling genes were all up-regulated, but other transcription factors showed no change in expression. In other layers/sectors, BDs showed no expression changes in these GAD(67) network genes. Overall, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that decreased expression of GAD(67) may be associated with an epigenetic mechanism in SZ. In BD, however, a suppression of transcription factors involved in cell differentiation may contribute to GABA dysfunction.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
7 J Psychiatry Neurosci 2009 Nov 34: 450-8
PMID 19949721
Title Expression profiles of schizophrenia susceptibility genes during human prefrontal cortical development.
Abstract Disruption in normal development of the human prefrontal cortex (PFC) may lead to cognitive dysfunction that manifests in individuals withschizophrenia。We sought to identify genes associated with age that are implicated inschizophrenia
We generated genome-wide expression profiles for the PFCs of humans ranging in age from 1 month to 49 years using the Affymetrix HG-U133 plus 2.0 microarrays (54 675 transcripts). Based on the criteria of significance (false discovery rate [FDR]-adjusted q < 0.001 and r(2) > 0.6), we identified the genes associated with age in the PFC. We then performed functional annotation analyses of age-associated genes using the Gene Ontology and the Genetic Association Database (GAD).
We found robust age-dependent changes in gene expression in the PFCs of humans (2281 transcripts). The GAD analysis revealed thatschizophreniawas an over-represented disease class, with 42 susceptibility genes included (p < 0.001, fold enrichment = 1.66, FDR = 1.5%). Among the 42 genes, glutamate receptor genes (GRIA1, GRIK1,GRIK2, GRIN2D, GRIP1, GRM5, GRM7 and SLC1A6) were consistently downregulated across age. We confirmed microarray gene expression changes by the quantitative polymerase chain reaction experiment.
Although numerous genes undergo robust changes in expression during the PFC development, some of the changes may be confounded by known and unknown factors that are intrinsic to the postmortem brain studies.
Multipleschizophreniasusceptibility genes undergo age-dependent expression changes in the human PFC, and any disruption in those genes during the critical period of development may predispose the individuals toschizophrenia
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
8 Pharmacogenet. Genomics 2011 Apr 21: 206-16
PMID 20859245
Title Glutamatergic gene variants impact the clinical profile of efficacy and side effects of haloperidol.
Abstract The glutamatergic system may be relevant to the pathophysiology of psychosis and to the effects of antipsychotic treatments.
We investigated a set of 62 SNPs located in genes coding for subunits of glutamatergic receptors (GAD1, GRIA1, GRIA3, GRIA4, GRID2, GRIK1,GRIK2, GRIK3, GRIK4, GRIN2B, GRM1 and GRM4), and the transporter of glycine (SLC6A5), as modulators of the effects of haloperidol.
We studied a sample of 101 acutely ill psychotic patients. We then validated our result in two independent samples from Slovenia (n=71 and n=118) ofschizophrenicpatients treated with antipsychotics. We both investigated the antipsychotic effect (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale) and motor side effect (Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale) at baseline and days 3, 7, 14, 21 and 28. SLC6A5 variant (rs2298826) was found to be associated with a rapid rise of motor side effects at the beginning of the treatment (repeated measures of analysis of variance, P=0.0002), followed by a subsequent adaptation, probably dependent on haloperidol doses down titration. A specific effect was noted for dyskinetic symptoms. Haplotype analysis strengthened the relevance of SLC6A5: the C-A-C haplotype (rs1443548, rs883377, rs1945771) was found to be associated with higher Extrapyramidal symptom rating scale scores (overall P=0.01, haplotype P=0.000001). We successfully replicated this finding in the two independent samples from Slovenia.
This result further stresses the relevance of the glutamatergic system in modulating the effects of haloperidol treatment, especially with regards to motor side effects.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
9 Hum. Mol. Genet. 2012 Jan 21: 311-21
PMID 21984433
Title Deregulation of the A-to-I RNA editing mechanism in psychiatric disorders.
Abstract schizophreniaand bipolar disorder (BPD) are common neurodevelopmental disorders, characterized by various life-crippling symptoms and high suicide rates. Multiple studies support a strong genetic involvement in the etiology of these disorders, although patterns of inheritance are variable and complex. Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is a cellular mechanism, which has been implicated in mental disorders and suicide. To examine the involvement of altered RNA editing in these disorders, we: (i) quantified the mRNA levels of the adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR) editing enzymes by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and (ii) measured the editing levels in transcripts of several neuroreceptors using 454 high-throughput sequencing, in dorsolateral-prefrontal cortices ofschizophrenics, BPD patients and controls. Increased expression of specific ADAR2 variants with diminished catalytic activity was observed inschizophrenia。Our results also indicate that the I/V editing site in the glutamate receptor, ionotropic kainate 2 (GRIK2) transcript is under-edited in BPD (type I) patients (45.8 versus 53.9%, P= 0.023).GRIK2has been implicated in mood disorders, and editing of its I/V site can modulate Ca(+2) permeability of the channel, consistent with numerous observations of elevated intracellular Ca(+2) levels in BPD patients. Our findings may therefore, at least partly, explain a molecular mechanism underlying the disorder. In addition, an intriguing correlation was found between editing events on separate exons ofGRIK2。Finally, multiple novel editing sites were detected near previously known sites, albeit most with very low editing rates. This supports the hypothesis raised previously regarding the existence of wide-spread low-level 'background' editing as a mechanism that enhances adaptation and evolvability.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
10 Hum. Mol. Genet. 2012 Jan 21: 311-21
PMID 21984433
Title Deregulation of the A-to-I RNA editing mechanism in psychiatric disorders.
Abstract schizophreniaand bipolar disorder (BPD) are common neurodevelopmental disorders, characterized by various life-crippling symptoms and high suicide rates. Multiple studies support a strong genetic involvement in the etiology of these disorders, although patterns of inheritance are variable and complex. Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is a cellular mechanism, which has been implicated in mental disorders and suicide. To examine the involvement of altered RNA editing in these disorders, we: (i) quantified the mRNA levels of the adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR) editing enzymes by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and (ii) measured the editing levels in transcripts of several neuroreceptors using 454 high-throughput sequencing, in dorsolateral-prefrontal cortices ofschizophrenics, BPD patients and controls. Increased expression of specific ADAR2 variants with diminished catalytic activity was observed inschizophrenia。Our results also indicate that the I/V editing site in the glutamate receptor, ionotropic kainate 2 (GRIK2) transcript is under-edited in BPD (type I) patients (45.8 versus 53.9%, P= 0.023).GRIK2has been implicated in mood disorders, and editing of its I/V site can modulate Ca(+2) permeability of the channel, consistent with numerous observations of elevated intracellular Ca(+2) levels in BPD patients. Our findings may therefore, at least partly, explain a molecular mechanism underlying the disorder. In addition, an intriguing correlation was found between editing events on separate exons ofGRIK2。Finally, multiple novel editing sites were detected near previously known sites, albeit most with very low editing rates. This supports the hypothesis raised previously regarding the existence of wide-spread low-level 'background' editing as a mechanism that enhances adaptation and evolvability.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
11 Psychopharmacology (Berl.) 2013 Nov 230: 49-55
PMID 23660601
Title Influence of polymorphisms in genes SLC1A1, GRIN2B, and GRIK2 on clozapine-induced obsessive-compulsive symptoms.
Abstract Clinical observations indicate that atypical antipsychotics, especially clozapine, induce obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms inschizophreniapatients. Recent data from neuroimaging and clinical trials suggest a role for altered glutamate neurotransmission in the etiology of OC disorder (OCD), and SLC1A1, GRIN2B, andGRIK2have all been reported to regulate glutamate transmission and affect OCD pathophysiology.
This study aimed to determine whether SLC1A1, GRIN2B, andGRIK2are associated with clozapine-induced OC symptoms.
A total of 250 clinically stableschizophreniarecrui接受氯氮平治疗的病人ted. The Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) was used to evaluate the severity of OC symptoms. Based on their Y-BOCS scores, 250 patients were divided into the OC and non-OC groups (patients with or without OC symptoms, respectively). Additionally, three reported OCD susceptibility polymorphisms, SLC1A1 (rs2228622), GRIN2B (rs890), andGRIK2(rs1556995), were genotyped.
Trends of association with OC symptoms were observed in rs2228622A and rs890T alleles. SLC1A1 and GRIN2B interaction was found in the significant two-locus gene-gene interaction model (p?=?0.0021), using the multifactor dimensionality reduction method. Further analysis showed a significant interaction between SLC1A1 and GRIN2B on the Y-BOCS score (F 6, 137?=?7.650, p?These results suggest that SLC1A1, GRIN2B, and interactions between the two may potentially confer a susceptibility to OC symptoms inschizophreniapatients receiving clozapine.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
12 Am. J. Med. Genet. A 2014 Feb 164A: 456-60
PMID 24449200
Title 1p34.3 deletion involving GRIK3: Further clinical implication of GRIK family glutamate receptors in the pathogenesis of developmental delay.
Abstract A growing body of evidence suggests an association between microdeletion/microduplication andschizophrenia/intellectual disability. Abnormal neurogenesis and neurotransmission have been implicated in the pathogenesis of these neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. The kainate/AMPA-type ionotropic glutamate receptor (GRIK?=?glutamate receptor, ionotropic, kainate) plays a critical role in synaptic potentiation, which is an essential process for learning and memory. Among the five known GRIK family members, haploinsufficiency of GRIK1,GRIK2, and GRIK4 are known to cause developmental delay, whereas the roles of GRIK3 and GRIK5 remain unknown. Herein, we report on a girl who presented with a severe developmental delay predominantly affecting her language and fine motor skills. She had a 2.6-Mb microdeletion in 1p34.3 involving GRIK3, which encodes a principal subunit of the kainate-type ionotropic glutamate receptor. Given its strong expression pattern in the central nervous system and the biological function of GRIK3 in presynaptic neurotransmission, the haploinsufficiency of GRIK3 is likely to be responsible for the severe developmental delay in the proposita. A review of genetic alterations and the phenotypic effects of all the GRIK family members support this hypothesis. The current observation of a microdeletion involving GRIK3, a kainate-type ionotropic glutamate receptor subunit, and the neurodevelopmental manifestation in the absence of major dysmorphism provides further clinical implication of the possible role of GRIK family glutamate receptors in the pathogenesis of developmental delay.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
13 Schizophr. Res. 2015 Sep 167: 73-83
PMID 25749020
Title Building models for postmortem abnormalities in hippocampus of schizophrenics.
Abstract Postmortem studies have suggested that there is abnormal GABAergic activity in the hippocampus inschizophrenia(SZ). In micro-dissected human hippocampal slices, a loss of interneurons and a compensatory upregulation of GABAA receptor binding activity on interneurons, but not PNs, has suggested that disinhibitory GABA-to-GABA connections are abnormal in stratum oriens (SO) of CA3/2, but not CA1, inschizophrenia。异常表达的表达的变化kainate receptor (KAR) subunits 5, 6 and 7, as well as an inwardly-rectifying hyperpolarization-activated cationic channel (Ih3; HCN3) may play important roles in regulating GABA cell activity at the SO CA3/2 locus. The exclusive neurons at this site are GABAergic interneurons; these cells also receive direct projections from the basolateral amygdala (BLA). When the BLA is stimulated by stereotaxic infusion of picrotoxin in rats, KARs influence axodendritic and presynaptic inhibitory mechanisms that regulate both inhibitory and disinhibitory interneurons in the SO-CA3/2 locus. The rat model described here was specifically developed to extend our understanding of these and other postmortem findings and has suggested that GABAergic abnormalities and possible disturbances in oscillatory rhythms may be related to a dysfunction of disinhibitory interneurons at the SO-CA3/2 site ofschizophrenics.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
14 Schizophr. Res. 2015 Sep 167: 73-83
PMID 25749020
Title Building models for postmortem abnormalities in hippocampus of schizophrenics.
Abstract Postmortem studies have suggested that there is abnormal GABAergic activity in the hippocampus inschizophrenia(SZ). In micro-dissected human hippocampal slices, a loss of interneurons and a compensatory upregulation of GABAA receptor binding activity on interneurons, but not PNs, has suggested that disinhibitory GABA-to-GABA connections are abnormal in stratum oriens (SO) of CA3/2, but not CA1, inschizophrenia。异常表达的表达的变化kainate receptor (KAR) subunits 5, 6 and 7, as well as an inwardly-rectifying hyperpolarization-activated cationic channel (Ih3; HCN3) may play important roles in regulating GABA cell activity at the SO CA3/2 locus. The exclusive neurons at this site are GABAergic interneurons; these cells also receive direct projections from the basolateral amygdala (BLA). When the BLA is stimulated by stereotaxic infusion of picrotoxin in rats, KARs influence axodendritic and presynaptic inhibitory mechanisms that regulate both inhibitory and disinhibitory interneurons in the SO-CA3/2 locus. The rat model described here was specifically developed to extend our understanding of these and other postmortem findings and has suggested that GABAergic abnormalities and possible disturbances in oscillatory rhythms may be related to a dysfunction of disinhibitory interneurons at the SO-CA3/2 site ofschizophrenics.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
15 Schizophr. Res. 2016 Jan 170: 30-40
PMID 26597662
Title Genetic assessment of additional endophenotypes from the Consortium on the Genetics of Schizophrenia Family Study.
Abstract The Consortium on the Genetics ofschizophreniaFamily Study (COGS-1) has previously reported our efforts to characterize the genetic architecture of 12 primary endophenotypes forschizophrenia。We now report the characterization of 13 additional measures derived from the same endophenotype test paradigms in the COGS-1 families. Nine of the measures were found to discriminate betweenschizophrenia病人和控制,明显heritable (31 to 62%), and were sufficiently independent of previously assessed endophenotypes, demonstrating utility as additional endophenotypes. Genotyping via a custom array of 1536 SNPs from 94 candidate genes identified associations for CTNNA2, ERBB4, GRID1, GRID2, GRIK3, GRIK4, GRIN2B, NOS1AP, NRG1, and RELN across multiple endophenotypes. An experiment-wide p value of 0.003 suggested that the associations across all SNPs and endophenotypes collectively exceeded chance. Linkage analyses performed using a genome-wide SNP array further identified significant or suggestive linkage for six of the candidate endophenotypes, with several genes of interest located beneath the linkage peaks (e.g., CSMD1, DISC1, DLGAP2,GRIK2, GRIN3A, and SLC6A3). While the partial convergence of the association and linkage likely reflects differences in density of gene coverage provided by the distinct genotyping platforms, it is also likely an indication of the differential contribution of rare and common variants for some genes and methodological differences in detection ability. Still, many of the genes implicated by COGS through endophenotypes have been identified by independent studies of common, rare, and de novo variation inschizophrenia, all converging on a functional genetic network related to glutamatergic neurotransmission that warrants further investigation.
SCZ Keywords schizophrenia, schizophrenic, schizophrenics
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