| Literature DB >> 23118852 |
Laura W Harris1, Sandra Pietsch, Tammy M K Cheng, Emanuel Schwarz, Paul C Guest, Sabine Bahn.
Abstract
We have recently shown that a molecular biomarker signature comprised of inflammatory, hormonal and growth factors occurs in the blood serum from first onset schizophrenia patients. Here, we use the same platform to investigate post mortem brain tissue (Brodmann area 10) from schizophrenia patients who were mainly chronically ill and drug treated. Twenty-one analytes are differentially expressed in post-mortem brain tissue. Comparison with our previous mRNA profiling studies of the same patient samples in another frontal cortical area showed that 9 of these molecules were also altered at the transcriptional level. Furthermore, 9 of the molecules were also altered in serum from living first onset schizophrenia patients compared to controls. We propose a model in which the brain and periphery are coordinated through hormones and other regulatory molecules released into the blood via the diffuse neuroendocrine system. These findings provide further evidence for the systemic nature of schizophrenia and give added validity to the concept that schizophrenia can be investigated through studies of blood-based biomarkers.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23118852 PMCID: PMC3484150 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0046368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic details of brain tissue samples.
| Control (n = 33) | Schizophrenia (n = 35) | Bipolar disorder (n = 33) | |
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| 25/8 | 26/9 | 15/18* |
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| 44.8±7.3 | 42.6±8.5 | 45.4±10.8 |
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| 6.61±0.27 | 6.47±0.24* | 6.44±0.30* |
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| 29.6±13.2 | 31.4±15.5 | 38.0±18.9* |
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| 0 | 85004±100335 | 9915±23158 |
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| na | 21±10.1 | 20±9.6 |
In schizophrenia samples, no significant differences were observed in age (p = 0.241), gender (p = 0.990) or PMI (0.610), however there was a significant difference in brain pH (p = 0.028). In bipolar disorder samples there were no significant difference in age (p = 0.801) but brain pH, PMI and gender differed significantly from control (p = 0.015, 0.044 and p = 0.023 respectively).
Demographic details for the serum cohorts [3].
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| SCZ1 | SCZ2 | SCZ3 | SCZ4 | SCZ5 | BPD1 |
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| 71 | 46 | 46 | 47 | 40 | 32 |
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| 59 | 46 | 45 | 40 | 40 | 59 |
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| 42/29 | 35/11 | 30/16 | 36/11 | 27/12 | 13/19 |
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| 31/28 | 35/11 | 27/18 | 33/7 | 26/14 | 31/28 |
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| 31±10 | 27±9 | 35±12 | 26±8 | 35±10 | 34±10 |
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| 30±8 | 27±9 | 34±12 | 27±4 | 36±11 | 30±8 |
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| 24±5 | 22±2 | 26±5 | na | 25±5 | 25±4 |
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| 23±4 | na | 24±4 | na | 24±3 | 23±4 |
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| 25/23/23 | 16/26/4 | 25/21/0 | 33/14/0 | 22/18/0 | 7/14/11 |
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| 25/34/0 | na | 11/34/0 | na | 18/22/0 | 25/34/0 |
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| 33/22/16 | 15/27/4 | 8/38/0 | 23/24/0 | 7/33/0 | 7/14/11 |
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| 31/25/3 | na | 0/45/0 | na | 3/37/0 | 31/25/3 |
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| all | all | 33 | all | all | 4 |
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| 23±6 | 18±7 | 21±5 | na | 23±7 | na |
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| 23±8 | 18±7 | 22±7 | na | 19±8 | na |
Schizophrenia subjects are first or recent-onset as described in [3]. The same controls are used for SCZ1 and BPD1. Values are shown as mean±s.d. Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; M/F, male/female; na, not available; PANSS, positive and negative syndrome scale; SCZ, schizophrenia; Y/N, yes/no.
Identification of altered molecules in brain tissues from schizophrenia and control subjects using multiplex immunoassay analysis.
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| P02741 |
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| 205753_at | n/s | n/s |
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| Interferon-γ | P01579 | 0.008 | 2.5 | 210354_at | n/s | n/s | 1 | 1.6 | ||
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| 5754 |
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| 201865_x_at/211671_s_at |
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| Q9HD89 |
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| 220570_at | n/s | n/s |
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| Adiponectin | Q15848 | 0.057 | 1.7 | 207175_at | n/s | n/s | 0 | |||
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| P19320 |
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| 203868_s_at | n/s |
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| 0 | ||
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| P01033 |
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| 201666_at |
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| n/s |
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| PARC (CCL18) | P55774 | 0.069 | 1.3 | 209924_at | n/s | n/s | 0 | |||
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| P15309 |
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| 204393_s_at | n/s |
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| 1 | −1.3 | |
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| Q8WX17 |
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| 220196_at | n/s |
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| 0 | ||
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| P10645 |
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| 204697_s_at |
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| n/s |
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| Human β (CC) chemokine-4 | O15467 | 0.005 | −1.1 | 207354_at | n/s | n/s | 0 | |||
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| P15692 |
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| 210513_s_at | n/s | n/s |
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| P40225 |
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| 211154_at |
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| n/s |
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| PO1023 |
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| 217757_at | n/s | n/s |
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| P01854 |
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| 1558438_a_at | not measured |
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| 0 | ||
| Matrix metalloproteinase-1 | P03956 | 0.003 | −1.4 | 204475_at | n/s | n/s | not measured | |||
| Cancer Antigen 19-9 | Q9BXJ9 | 0.016 | −2.2 | not measured | 1 | 1.4 | ||||
| Fibroblast growth factor-4 | P08620 | 0.018 | −2.5 | 206783_at | n/s | n/s | 0 | |||
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| P13236 |
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| 204103_at | n/s |
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| 1 | −1.3 | |
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| PO8263 |
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| 215766_at | n/s | n/s |
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Columns 3–4 show p values and fold change (FC) values between schizophrenia and control groups by ANCOVA, including age, brain pH, PMI and haemoglobin level as covariates.
Indicates loss of significance after the adjustment for haemoglobin level,
indicates significance achieved only after adjustment for haemoglobin level. The list of altered brain analytes was compared with published microarray mRNA transcript data (column 5 shows the Affymetrix probes used; for cortisol, the probe for the associated NR3C receptor was used; for genes with more than one probe, only the most significant probe is shown). Columns 6–9 show p values and fold changes for targeted transcripts in brain tissue (BA9; [10]and cerebral microvascular endothelial cells [11] from the same individuals used in this study (only those values with p<0.05 are shown). Columns 11 shows fold changes of the corresponding analytes in serum from 5 living cohorts of recent onset schizophrenia patients (n = 250) and control subjects (n = 230) [3]. Mean fold change over all significant cohorts is shown.
indicates an inconsistent fold change between centres. Column 10 indicates how many cohorts the analyte was significant in. Bold text indicates overlap between the brain analytes, mRNA transcripts or serum analytes. Reproducibility for serum analytes was only considered where significance occurred in at least 2 cohorts. TIMP-1 = tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1, VCAM-1 = vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, PARC = pulmonary activation-regulated chemokine, VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor, MIP-1β = macrophage inflammatory protein-1beta.
Figure 1Enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay validation of changes in brain protein levels.
A subset of the same brain samples used for multiplex immunoassay analysis was analyzed using uniplex ELISAs as indicated. All 3 proteins tested showed consistent results with the findings in the multiplex immunoassay analysis. Interferon-γ, p = 0.043, FC = 1.4; Chromogranin A, p = 0.004, FC = −1.3; tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 1 (TIMP-1), p = 0.15, FC 1.3. FC = fold change.
Figure 2Brain vs serum analysis.
Targeted analyte cluster analysis was performed to identify clusters of co-behaving analytes having the ability to distinguish schizophrenia from control with significantly greater precision than bipolar disorder from control. The cluster derived from brain tissue data showing the most similarity in serum data consisted of alpha-2 macroglobulin + plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 + prostatic acid phosphatase + serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (A). The cluster derived from serum data showing the most similarity in brain data consisted of alpha-1 antitrypsin, alpha-2 macroglobulin + cortisol + sex hormone binding globulin + sortilin (B). (C) Ingenuity Pathways Analysis was performed on the cluster of co-behaving analytes derived from brain tissue (schizophrenia vs control) which gave most similar results in serum. The analysis shows that these four molecules (marked in green) interact via IL1β (marked in orange), which has previously been found altered in schizophrenia (see text for details). Solid lines represent physical interactions (i.e. binding), whereas arrows represent any other type of indirect cellular interactions. PAI-1 plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, GOT1 serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, A2M alpha-1 macroglobulin, PAP prostatic acid phosphatase. Other members of network represented by HUGO gene symbols.