A decrease of reelin expression as a putative vulnerability factor in schizophrenia

F Impagnatiello, AR Guidotti, C Pesold… - Proceedings of the …, 1998 - National Acad Sciences
F Impagnatiello, AR Guidotti, C Pesold, Y Dwivedi, H Caruncho, MG Pisu, DP Uzunov…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998National Acad Sciences
Postmortem prefrontal cortices (PFC)(Brodmann's areas 10 and 46), temporal cortices
(Brodmann's area 22), hippocampi, caudate nuclei, and cerebella of schizophrenia patients
and their matched nonpsychiatric subjects were compared for reelin (RELN) mRNA and
reelin (RELN) protein content. In all of the brain areas studied, RELN and its mRNA were
significantly reduced (≈ 50%) in patients with schizophrenia; this decrease was similar in
patients affected by undifferentiated or paranoid schizophrenia. To exclude possible artifacts …
Postmortem prefrontal cortices (PFC) (Brodmann’s areas 10 and 46), temporal cortices (Brodmann’s area 22), hippocampi, caudate nuclei, and cerebella of schizophrenia patients and their matched nonpsychiatric subjects were compared for reelin (RELN) mRNA and reelin (RELN) protein content. In all of the brain areas studied, RELN and its mRNA were significantly reduced (≈50%) in patients with schizophrenia; this decrease was similar in patients affected by undifferentiated or paranoid schizophrenia. To exclude possible artifacts caused by postmortem mRNA degradation, we measured the mRNAs in the same PFC extracts from γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptors α1 and α5 and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor α7 subunits. Whereas the expression of the α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit was normal, that of the α1 and α5 receptor subunits of GABAA was increased when schizophrenia was present. RELN mRNA was preferentially expressed in GABAergic interneurons of PFC, temporal cortex, hippocampus, and glutamatergic granule cells of cerebellum. A protein putatively functioning as an intracellular target for the signal-transduction cascade triggered by RELN protein released into the extracellular matrix is termed mouse disabled-1 (DAB1) and is expressed at comparable levels in the neuroplasm of the PFC and hippocampal pyramidal neurons, cerebellar Purkinje neurons of schizophrenia patients, and nonpsychiatric subjects; these three types of neurons do not express RELN protein. In the same samples of temporal cortex, we found a decrease in RELN protein of ≈50% but no changes in DAB1 protein expression. We also observed a large (up to 70%) decrease of GAD67 but only a small decrease of GAD65 protein content. These findings are interpreted within a neurodevelopmental/vulnerability “two-hit” model for the etiology of schizophrenia.
National Acad Sciences