Rates of rare mutations soar 3 to 4 times higher in schizophrenia
Multiple genetic glitches disrupt pathways critical for brain development
People
with schizophrenia have high rates of rare genetic deletions and
duplications that likely disrupt the developing brain, according to
studies funded in part by the National Institutes of Health.
These
tiny anomalies were found in 15 percent of adult onset schizophrenia
patients and 20 percent of child and adolescent onset patients,
compared with only 5 percent of healthy participants. Collectively, the
mutations carried by patients were significantly more likely than those
in healthy participants to disrupt genes involved in brain development
-- potentially implicating hundreds of genes in the illness, which
affects about 1 percent of adults.
“This is an important new
finding in the genetics of schizophrenia,” said NIMH Director Thomas R.
Insel, M.D. “Identifying genes prone to harboring these mutations in
brain development pathways holds promise for treatment and prevention
of schizophrenia, as well as a wide range of other neurodevelopmental
brain disorders.”
Two independent teams of researchers report
on their combined findings in an article published online in Science
Express, March 27, 2008. One team was led by Judith Rapoport, M.D., and
Anjene Addington, Ph.D., National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),
Intramural Research Program. The other team was led by Jonathan Sebat,
Ph.D., and Shane McCarthy, Ph.D., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and by
Jon McClellan, M.D., Tom Walsh, Ph.D., and Mary-Claire King, Ph.D.,
University of Washington. Their research was supported in part by the
NIMH, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National
Center for Research Resources, and the National Institute on Aging.
The
prevailing genetic model of schizophrenia implicates common variants of
certain suspect candidate genes, each exerting modest effects, in
interaction with each other and environmental factors. This hypothesis
holds that risk stems from common variations in the sequence of the
genetic code that result in altered protein products.
About a
year ago, Sebat, King and colleagues reported evidence strengthening
the case for a different kind of genetic risk. Many people with autism
were found to have different, spontaneous and individually rare
structural variations -- variations in the number of copies of genes.
These copy number variations were scattered throughout the genome,
suggesting that many different genes could be involved in autism
spectrum disorders.
The new findings in schizophrenia echo
those in autism, but also broaden their implications. The results
suggest a new approach for discovering genes for schizophrenia and
other mental disorders, say the researchers. Any mutation in the
hundreds of genes involved in brain development could lead to a
different set of neurodevelopmental consequences – schizophrenia,
autism, mental retardation, or no illness at all. Each person with one
of the illnesses could have a different genetic cause for the disorder.
The
functional consequences of these structural genetic variations may
differ, depending on interactions with other genes or environmental
events, say the researchers, making any gene harboring a deleterious
structural mutation a “candidate gene.” Any gene harboring one mutation
likely contains others. Although each might be individually rare,
together such disease-causing variations in one gene could explain a
substantial number of illness cases, they suggest.
Among key study findings:
*
Genes disrupted in patients, as opposed to healthy participants, were
significantly over-represented in pathways critical for brain
development. These included genes involved in creating the
infrastructure by which neurons communicate -- and for neuronal growth,
migration, proliferation, differentiation, and cell death. Among these
were genes important for neuronal communications via glutamate and
neuregulin, both of which have previously been implicated in
schizophrenia.
* The mutations were often specific to single
cases or families. Virtually every mutation detected by King, Sebat and
colleagues was different in a sample of 150 adults with schizophrenia
and 268 healthy controls.
* In families affected by childhood
onset schizophrenia, Rapoport and colleagues found that 28 percent (23)
of 83 patients harbored mutations, compared with 13 percent (10) of 77
controls. By using the non-transmitted chromosomes of the patients’
parents as controls, the researchers were able to determine if the
mutations in their children were likely inherited or spontaneous. The
majority turned out to be inherited rather than spontaneous, some from
parents unaffected by the illness. Childhood onset schizophrenia is
thought to be a more severe and more genetically influenced form of the
illness. Go Back to Other News Stories
|