| Literature DB >> 34010744 |
Jari Tiihonen1, Marja Koskuvi2, Markku Lähteenvuo3, Kalevi Trontti4, Ilkka Ojansuu3, Olli Vaurio3, Tyrone D Cannon5, Jouko Lönnqvist6, Sebastian Therman7, Jaana Suvisaari7, Lesley Cheng8, Antti Tanskanen9, Heidi Taipale10, Šárka Lehtonen2, Jari Koistinaho2.
Abstract
The molecular pathophysiological mechanisms underlying schizophrenia have remained unknown, and no treatment exists for primary prevention. We used Ingenuity Pathway Analysis to analyze canonical and causal pathways in two different datasets, including patients from Finland and USA. The most significant findings in canonical pathway analysis were observed for glutamate receptor signaling, hepatic fibrosis, and glycoprotein 6 (GP6) pathways in the Finnish dataset, and GP6 and hepatic fibrosis pathways in the US dataset. In data-driven causal pathways, ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA genes were involved in the majority of the top 10 pathways differentiating patients and controls in both Finnish and US datasets. Results from a Finnish nation-wide database showed that the risk of schizophrenia relapse was 41% lower among first-episode patients during the use of losartan, the master regulator of an ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA-related pathway, compared to those time periods when the same individual did not use the drug. The results from the two independent datasets suggest that the GP6 signaling pathway, and the ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA-related purine, oxidative stress, and glutamatergic signaling pathways are among primary pathophysiological alterations in schizophrenia among patients with European ancestry. While no reproducible dopaminergic alterations were observed, the results imply that agents such as losartan, and ADCYAP1/PACAP -deficit alleviators, such as metabotropic glutamate 2/3 agonist MGS0028 and 5-HT7 antagonists - which have shown beneficial effects in an experimental Adcyap1-/- mouse model for schizophrenia - could be potential treatments even before the full manifestation of illness involving dopaminergic abnormalities.Entities:
Keywords: Pathway; Schizophrenia; Stem cell; hiPSc
Year: 2021 PMID: 34010744 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2021.05.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.939