| Literature DB >> 27606318 |
Meng Xia1, Jantine A C Broek2, Yan Jouroukhin3, Jeannine Schoenfelder2, Sofya Abazyan3, Hanna Jaaro-Peled3, Akira Sawa4, Sabine Bahn2, Mikhail Pletnikov5.
Abstract
Despite the recent progress in psychiatric genetics, very few studies have focused on genetic risk factors in glial cells that, compared to neurons, can manifest different molecular pathologies underlying psychiatric disorders. In order to address this issue, we studied the effects of mutant disrupted in schizophrenia 1 (DISC1), a genetic risk factor for schizophrenia, in cultured primary neurons and astrocytes using an unbiased mass spectrometry-based proteomic approach. We found that selective expression of mutant DISC1 in neurons affects a wide variety of proteins predominantly involved in neuronal development (e.g., SOX1) and vesicular transport (Rab proteins), whereas selective expression of mutant DISC1 in astrocytes produces changes in the levels of mitochondrial (GDPM), nuclear (TMM43) and cell adhesion (ECM2) proteins. The present study demonstrates that DISC1 variants can perturb distinct molecular pathways in a cell type-specific fashion to contribute to psychiatric disorders through heterogenic effects in diverse brain cells.Entities:
Keywords: Astrocytes; Biomarkers; DISC1; Neurons; Proteomics; Psychiatric disorders
Year: 2016 PMID: 27606318 PMCID: PMC4996005 DOI: 10.1159/000444587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neuropsychiatry ISSN: 2296-9179