| Literature DB >> 27725886 |
Paula Moran1, Jennifer Stokes2, Julia Marr2, Gavin Bock2, Lieve Desbonnet3, John Waddington4, Colm O'Tuathaigh2.
Abstract
The study of gene × environment, as well as epistatic interactions in schizophrenia, has provided important insight into the complex etiopathologic basis of schizophrenia. It has also increased our understanding of the role of susceptibility genes in the disorder and is an important consideration as we seek to translate genetic advances into novel antipsychotic treatment targets. This review summarises data arising from research involving the modelling of gene × environment interactions in schizophrenia using preclinical genetic models. Evidence for synergistic effects on the expression of schizophrenia-relevant endophenotypes will be discussed. It is proposed that valid and multifactorial preclinical models are important tools for identifying critical areas, as well as underlying mechanisms, of convergence of genetic and environmental risk factors, and their interaction in schizophrenia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27725886 PMCID: PMC5048038 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2173748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Summary of evidence for gene, environment, and gene × environment effects in mutant models for selected genes associated with schizophrenia.
| Gene target | Environmental exposure | Reference(s) | Impact on schizophrenia-relevant | Use of preventative or rescue strategy | ||
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| Genetic manipulation | Environmental manipulation | Gene × environment | ||||
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| Prenatal Poly I:C | [ | Decreased social novelty preference and PPI; sex-specific (females only) decrease in working memory | Disruption of working memory and PPI | Decreased sociability in Poly I:C × WT mice only; sex-specific decrease in alternation (i.e., working memory) following Poly I:C treatment was attenuated in female | — |
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| Acute Δ-9 THC during adulthood | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity; decreased anxiety in the elevated plus maze and light-dark test; increased | Decreased novelty-induced activity; increased anxiety in the elevated plus maze; enhanced PPI; decreased social interaction; increased | Increased sensitivity to locomotor suppressant effects of THC in | — |
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| Subchronic CP 55, 940 [CB1R agonist] during adulthood | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity | Decreased novelty-induced activity; increased anxiety in elevated plus maze and open field | Increased tolerance to CP55,940-induced anxiolytic and locomotor suppressant effects in | — |
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| Subchronic Δ-9-THC during adolescence | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity | Decreased novelty-induced activity | Decreased anxiogenic effects of THC in | — |
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| Subchronic cannabidiol during adulthood | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity; disrupted PPI; decreased 5-HT2a receptor binding in substantia nigra | Enhanced PPI after acute cannabidiol; increased social interaction following chronic cannabidiol | Decreased sensitivity to anxiolytic effects of cannabidiol in mutants; selective enhancement of social interaction and PPI in | — |
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| Subchronic Δ-9 THC during adolescence | [ | Altered expression of proteins involved in vesicular release of neurotransmitters, 5-HT neurotransmission, and growth factor expression | Reduced hippocampal expression of heat shock proteins and oxidative stress | Altered expression of proteins implicated in NMDA-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission | — |
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| Social defeat during adolescence | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity; decreased social novelty preference; PPI disruption; decreased anxiety | — | Selective decrease in anxiety and working memory in stressed | — |
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| Chronic restraint stress during adolescence | [ | — | Increased NMDA receptor binding in ventral part of the lateral septum and dentate gyrus | PPI disruption in | — |
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| Prenatal Poly I:C | [ | Enlargement of the lateral ventricles | Increased anxiety in open field; decreased volume of amygdala and left/right periaqueductal grey; decrease in linear density of spines in pyramidal neurons of the CA1 region | Increase in anxiety in elevated plus maze and increased immobility in forced swim test in | — |
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| Prenatal Poly I:C | [ | Decreased PPI in | Decreased PPI and LI; disruption of spatial discrimination and object exploration | More prominent PPI and LI deficits in L100P mutants; impaired working memory and sociability in challenged | Coadministration of IL-6 antagonist with Poly I:C reversed Poly I:C-related deficits in mutants and controls |
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| Neonatal Poly I:C | [ | — | — | Selective deficits in short-term memory and object recognition memory in | Cognitive deficits in Poly I:C-treated DISC1 mutants improved by clozapine while haloperidol had no effect; clozapine suppressed the augmentation of MK-801-induced hyperactivity |
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| Prenatal lead exposure | [ | Enlargement of lateral ventricles; decreased anxiety in open field | Increased anxiety in open field; increased anxiety in elevated plus maze; increased MX-801 responsivity; decreased PPI; enlargement of lateral ventricles | Heightened responsivity to the NMDAR antagonist MK-801 and increased PPI disruption in female | Systemic administration of D-serine, a coagonist at the NMDA receptor, reversed PPI deficits in female lead-exposed mutants |
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| Subchronic Δ-9 THC during adolescence | [ | Decrease in contextual fear memory; decreased synaptic CB1R expression in the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and amygdala | Decrease in synaptic CB1R expression in the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and amygdala | Disruption in cue-dependent fear memory | — |
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| Social defeat during adulthood | [ | Decreased PPI in | Increased immobility in forced swim test; decreased sucrose intake in the sucrose consumption test | Decrease in exploratory activity and sociability and social novelty in L100P; increase in anxiety in the elevated plus maze in L100P but not Q31L mutants exposed to social defeat | — |
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| Prolonged social isolation during adolescence | [ | — | — | PPI disruption, forced swim immobility, and methamphetamine-induced locomotion, in isolated | RU-486 normalized basal and methamphetamine-induced extracellular DA, tyrosine hydroxylase, and DA D2 receptor levels in G × E model; RU-486 also reversed PPI, forced swim test deficits, and changes in amphetamine-induced activity in this model |
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| Subchronic Δ-9 THC during adolescence | [ | Improved spatial working memory in | Decreased object recognition, social novelty preference, and anxiety | Increased hyperactivity and greater disruption of working memory in THC-treated | — |
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| Subchronic Win 55,212 [CB1R agonist] during adolescence | [ | — | Decreased social novelty preference; decreased anxiety in the light-dark test | Selective disruption of PPI in cannabinoid-treated | — |
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| Subchronic Δ-9 THC during adolescence | [ | Increased CB1R intensity in the prefrontal cortex; decreased CB1R intensity in the hippocampus; parvalbumin cell size decreased in | Decreased cell density in the VTA | Decreased parvalbumin cell intensity in the prefrontal cortex; decreased DA cell size in VTA; increased CB1R intensity in hippocampus of THC-treated | — |
BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; CB1R, cannabinoid receptor 1; COMT, catechol-O-methyltransferase; DA, dopamine; Δ-9 THC, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol; DISC1, disrupted in schizophrenia 1; GABAA, gamma-aminobutyric acid type A receptor; IL-6, interleukin 6; KO, knockout; LI, latent inhibition; NMDA receptor, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor; NRG1, neuregulin-1; PPI, prepulse inhibition; 5-HT2A, serotonin 2A receptor; VTA, ventral tegmental area.
Summary of evidence for gene, environment, and gene × environment effects in mutant models for selected genes associated with schizophrenia.
| Gene target | Environmental exposure | Reference(s) | Impact on schizophrenia-relevant | Use of preventative or rescue strategy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genetic manipulation | Environmental manipulation | Gene × environment | ||||
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| Prenatal Poly I:C | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity; decreased PPI, reduction in tyrosine hydroxylase-positive cells in the substantia nigra | Increased novelty-induced activity; decreased PPI; spatial working memory deficits; increase in tyrosine hydroxylase-positive cells in the VTA | Additive effects on novelty-induced hyperactivity; synergistic reduction in attentional shifting and sustained attention; decrease in DA D2 receptor immunoreactivity in the nucleus accumbens | — |
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| Variable prenatal stress | [ | Decreased PPI in the | PPI disruption | Decreased social novelty preference | Clozapine and haloperidol (to a lesser extent) reversal of PPI deficits was most pronounced in G × E group |
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| Prenatal nicotine exposure | [ | Increased novelty-induced activity and decreased social interaction | — | More pronounced novelty-induced hyperactivity and greater disruption of social interaction; deficits in DA D2 receptor-dependent induction of long-term synaptic depression | — |
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| Chronic methamphetamine exposure | [ | — | Locomotor sensitisation and increased entropy | Decreased locomotor sensitisation and entropy in | — |
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| Chronic methamphetamine exposure | [ | Decreased PPI and increased acoustic startle reactivity in | Locomotor sensitisation; increased sensitivity to MK-801 and amphetamine-induced PPI disruption | Increased sensitivity to amphetamine-induced PPI disruption in preexposed | — |
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| Maternal separation | [ | Decreased frequency of ultrasonic vocalisations; decreased activity in a novel environment | — | Decreased sensitivity to disruptive effects of maternal separation in heterozygous | — |
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| Prenatal exposure to the pesticide chlorpyrifos | [ | Decreased frequency of ultrasonic vocalisations | — | Prenatal chlorpyrifos: selective increase in ultrasonic vocalisation in | — |
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| Prenatal hypoxia | [ | Increase in frontal cortex volume in | Reduction in glucocorticoid receptor protein levels in frontal cortex | Increase in frontal cortex volume in WT but opposite effect observed in | — |
BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; DA, dopamine; Δ-9 THC, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol; NURR1, nuclear receptor related 1 protein; PPI, prepulse inhibition; RELN, reelin; SNAP-25, synaptosome associated protein 25 kDa; VTA, ventral tegmental area; WT, wildtype.