Neuregulin 1-erbB signaling and the molecular/cellular basis of schizophrenia

G Corfas, K Roy, JD Buxbaum - Nature neuroscience, 2004 - nature.com
Nature neuroscience, 2004nature.com
Schizophrenia is a devastating psychiatric disease that affects 0.5–1% of the world's adult
population. The hypothesis that this disease is a developmental disorder of the nervous
system with late onset of its characteristic symptoms has been gaining acceptance in past
years. However, the anatomical, cellular and molecular bases of schizophrenia remain
unclear. Numerous studies point to alterations in different aspects of brain development as
possible causes of schizophrenia, including defects in neuronal migration, neurotransmitter …
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a devastating psychiatric disease that affects 0.5–1% of the world's adult population. The hypothesis that this disease is a developmental disorder of the nervous system with late onset of its characteristic symptoms has been gaining acceptance in past years. However, the anatomical, cellular and molecular bases of schizophrenia remain unclear. Numerous studies point to alterations in different aspects of brain development as possible causes of schizophrenia, including defects in neuronal migration, neurotransmitter receptor expression and myelination. Recently, the gene that encodes neuregulin-1 (NRG1) has been identified as a potential susceptibility gene for schizophrenia, and defects in the expression of erbB3, one of the NRG1 receptors, have been shown to occur in the prefrontal cortex of schizophrenic patients, suggesting that NRG1-erbB signaling is involved in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. These findings open new approaches to defining the molecular and cellular basis of schizophrenia in more mechanistic terms.
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