'Bad' Gene Causes
Schizophrenia
(March 5, 2007) -- Chicago - An international team of researchers said on
Wednesday that they had conducted laboratory studies on mice that provide
further evidence to show that a malfunctioning gene can cause both
schizophrenia and
depression.
The gene, DISC1, was first identified in 2000 in a large Scottish family
with a history of multiple mental illnesses, but little is known about how
the mutations in the gene interfere with biology to trigger
mental disorders.
The hope is that having reproduced the defect in mice, those mice will
serve as guinea pigs for future treatments for the disorders.
The investigators began their experiment by inducing mutations in a batch
of mice using chemical compounds.
When they screened the mice they found they had two groups of mice with
quite distinct mutations in the DISC1 gene.
Subsequent testing showed that one of the mutant mouse strains appeared
to exhibit schizophrenia-type symptoms such as attention and memory
deficits.
When those mice were treated with the antipsychotic drugs
Haldol and
Clozapine, the symptoms cleared up.
Similarly, tests on another batch of mice with a different mutation in
the DISC1 gene suggested they were exhibiting symptoms of depression and
when the rodents were treated with an
antidepressant, Zyban, they also improved.
Professor David Porteous, chair of Human Molecular Genetics and Medicine
at the University of Edinburgh, said the findings bolster previous research
linking the gene with schizophrenia, depression and bipolar disorder.
Different types of damage to the gene
"We also found remarkable clear cut differences between the different
types of damage to the gene and the treatment that was most effective. By
analyzing how the brain changes and develops over time we would hope that
this would lead to more effective drugs to treat such illnesses."
About one in 50 people worldwide will develop the
symptoms of schizophrenia or
bipolar disorder, otherwise known as manic depression, with the first
signs often appearing in late adolescence or early adulthood.
Most cases arise in families with some sort of history of mental illness
implying a strong influence of genes.
The study is published in the journal Neuron, and was a collaboration of
researchers at Mount Sinai and the University of Edinburgh in Britain.
Source: News 24
Last updated: 03/07
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