Decreased cortical muscarinic M1 receptors in schizophrenia are associated with changes in gene promoter methylation, mRNA and gene targeting microRNA

被引:0
|
作者
E Scarr
J M Craig
M J Cairns
M S Seo
J C Galati
N J Beveridge
A Gibbons
S Juzva
B Weinrich
M Parkinson-Bates
A P Carroll
R Saffery
B Dean
机构
[1] The University of Melbourne,The Department of Psychiatry
[2] The Early Life Epigenetic Group,The Department of Paediatrics
[3] The Murdoch’s Children’s Research Institute,Department of Mathematics and Statistics
[4] The Royal Children’s Hospital,undefined
[5] The University of Melbourne,undefined
[6] The School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy,undefined
[7] and Hunter Medical Research Institute,undefined
[8] University of Newcastle,undefined
[9] The Schizophrenia Research Institute,undefined
[10] University of Sydney,undefined
[11] The Molecular Psychiatry Laboratory,undefined
[12] The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health,undefined
[13] The Murdoch Children’s Research Institute,undefined
[14] Royal Children’s Hospital,undefined
[15] La Trobe University,undefined
[16] The Cancer and the Developmental Epigenetics Group,undefined
[17] The Murdoch Children’s Research Institute,undefined
[18] Royal Children’s Hospital,undefined
来源
Translational Psychiatry | 2013年 / 3卷
关键词
cortex; CHRM1; muscarinic M1 receptor; postmortem CNS; schizophrenia;
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学科分类号
摘要
Many studies have shown decreased cortical muscarinic M1 receptors (CHRM1) in schizophrenia (Sz), with one study showing Sz can be separated into two populations based on a marked loss of CHRM1 (∼75%) in ∼25% of people (Def-Sz) with the disorder. To better understand the mechanism contributing to the loss of CHRM1 in Def-Sz, we measured specific markers of gene expression in the cortex of people with Sz as a whole, people differentiated into Def-Sz and people with Sz that do not have a deficit in cortical CHRM1 (Non-Def-Sz) and health controls. We now report that cortical CHRM1 gene promoter methylation and CHRM1 mRNA are decrease in Sz, Def-Sz and Non-Def-Sz but levels of the micro RNA (miR)-107, a CHRM1 targeting miR, are increased only in Def-Sz. We also report in vitro data strongly supporting the notion that miR-107 levels regulate CHRM1 expression. These data suggest there is a reversal of the expected inverse relationship between gene promoter methylation and CHRM1 mRNA in people with Sz and that a breakdown in gene promoter methylation control of CHRM1 expression is contributing to the global pathophysiology of the syndrome. In addition, our data argues that increased levels of at least one miR, miR-107, is contributing to the marked loss of cortical CHRM1 in Def-Sz and this may be a differentiating pathophysiology. These latter data continue to support the hypothesis that microRNAs (miRNA) have a role in the underlying neurobiology of Sz but argue they are differentially affected in subsets of people within that syndrome.
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页码:e230 / e230
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