Genetic Variation Helps To Understand Predisposition To Schizophrenia
(August 10, 2007) -- Science Daily — Scientists have provided new insight
into how a gene is related to
schizophrenia. In a study to be published in the August 17 issue of the
Journal of Biological Chemistry, Amanda J. Law, Medical Research Council
Fellow and Associate Professor at the University of Oxford, United Kingdom,
and visiting scientist at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), along
with colleagues at NIH describe for the first time a genetic variation that
causes a gene to be overexpressed in the human brain. These results may
provide a new way to design
better drugs to treat schizophrenia.
"Although the exact
causes of schizophrenia are yet to be determined,
scientists agree that the disease is in part due to genetic variations," Law
says. "These variations are not simple to understand because they don't
directly disturb the function of proteins. In our study, we identified some
clues as to what goes wrong with one of these DNA variations."
Scientists originally found in an Icelandic population that genetic
variations in a DNA sequence close to a gene that produces a protein called
Neuregulin 1 were associated with schizophrenia, but how the Neuregulin 1
gene was affected remained unknown.
In 2006, Law and colleagues found that one of these DNA variations is
associated with increased expression of a novel type of Neuregulin 1 called
type 4 -- one of the six known types of Neuregulin 1 proteins -- in the
brains of patients with schizophrenia.
The role of this protein in the brain is not completely understood but
the other types of Neuregulin 1 proteins are involved in controlling how the
brain develops and works in adults. In this study, Law and colleagues showed
that Neuregulin 1 type 4 is specifically expressed in the brain -- unlike
the other types of Neuregulin 1. Also, the scientists showed that this
protein is 3.5 times more abundant in fetal than adult brains, supporting
the protein's important role in the developing brain.
"Since the Neuregulin 1 protein plays a key role in brain development and
is more abundant in fetal brains, DNA changes that alter the expression of
this protein may contribute to schizophrenia by modifying the development
and wiring of the brain," Law says. "By understanding how this novel protein
works in the brain, we may be able to target it in people with the disease."
The researchers showed that the genetic change that causes overproduction
of Neuregulin 1 type 4 is part of a DNA sequence called a promoter, which
enables genes to be coded for proteins. A protein called a transcription
factor binds to the promoter and helps other proteins to express the gene.
When the promoter is altered, the transcription factor may not bind properly
and impair genetic expression. Law and colleagues showed that alteration of
the promoter in the genetic sequence linked to schizophrenia resulted in
altered amounts of Neuregulin 1 type 4.
"For the first time, we have identified a promoter for the Neuregulin 1
gene and showed that the activity of that gene is altered by a single
genetic variation in this promoter," Law says. "These results will probably
help us understand how DNA variations affect the function of this gene and
lead to
symptoms of schizophrenia."
The researchers are now planning to investigate further the role of
Neuregulin 1 type 4 in brain development and behavior and determine how
various alterations of the Neuregulin 1 gene lead to schizophrenia.
"By better understanding the genetic causes of schizophrenia, we can
start to make sense of the underlying biology of the disease and develop
improved therapies based on people's genes," Law says. "The insight gained
on the Neuregulin 1 gene is, I hope, bringing us closer to that goal."
The study was selected as a "Paper of the Week" by the journal's editors,
meaning that it belongs to the top one percent of papers reviewed in
significance and overall importance.
Article: "Molecular Cloning of a Brain-specific, Developmentally
Regulated Neuregulin 1 (NRG1) Isoform and Identification of a Functional
Promoter Variant Associated with Schizophrenia," by Wei Tan, Yanhong Wang,
Bert Gold, Jingshan Chen, Michael Dean, Paul J. Harrison, Daniel R.
Weinberger, and Amanda J. Law
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by American
Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
Source: Science Daily
Last updated: 08/07
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