Biomarkers For Psychosis
Main Category: Schizophrenia News
Article Date: 09 Nov 2006 - 7:00am (PST)

Psychotic
symptoms such as hallucinations, delusions, personality changes, and
disorganized thinking occur in several psychiatric disorders, including
schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and psychotic depression. Scientists
understand little of what goes wrong in a psychotic person's brain, but
hope that brain imaging and systematic characterization of genetic
activity and protein composition in the brain might help to shed light
on mental diseases, eventually leading to better diagnosis, treatment,
and possibly even prevention. A new study by Sabine Bahn and colleagues
(Cambridge University) published in the international open-access
journal PLoS Medicine provides a step in that direction.
The researchers compared the protein composition in the cerebrospinal
fluid (the clear body fluid that surrounds the brain and the spinal
cord) of 79 patients with different psychotic disorders and 90 mentally
healthy individuals who served as controls. They found that samples
from patients with psychosis had a number of characteristic changes
compared with samples from control individuals, and that those changes
were not found in the patients with other mental illnesses. They then
wanted to test whether they would see the same pattern in a separate
set of patients with psychotic illness, which turned out to be the
case. Two of the changes in the cerebrospinal fluid associated with
schizophrenia, namely higher levels of parts of a protein called VGF
and lower levels of a protein called transthyretin, were also found in
post-mortem brain samples of patients with schizophrenia compared with
samples from controls.
These results suggest that this approach has the potential to
find biomarkers for psychosis and possibly schizophrenia, which would
be helpful for diagnosis and might help to understand the molecular
basis for these conditions. If shown, in future studies, to be directly
involved in causing the disease symptoms, they would be important
targets for rational treatment and prevention efforts.
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Citation: Huang JTJ, Leweke M, Oxley D, Wang L, Harris N, et
al. (2006) Disease biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with
first-onset psychosis. PLoS Med 3(11): e428.
PLEASE ADD THE LINK TO THE PUBLISHED ARTICLE IN ONLINE
VERSIONS OF YOUR REPORT: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030428
CONTACT:
Sabine Bahn
University of Cambridge
Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research
Tennis Court Road
Cambridge, CB2 1QT United Kingdom