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2‐D DIGE analysis implicates cytoskeletal abnormalities in psychiatric disease
Authors:Jane A. English  Patrick Dicker  Melanie Föcking  Michael J. Dunn  David R. Cotter
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychiatry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland;2. Proteome Research Centre, UCD Conway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research, School of Medicine and Medical Sciences, University College Dublin, Ireland
Abstract:The mechanisms underlying white matter changes in psychiatric disease are not known. We aimed to characterise the differential protein expression in deep white matter from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex from 35 schizophrenia, 35 bipolar disorder, and 35 control subjects, from the Stanley Array Collection. We used 2‐D DIGE to profile for protein expression changes in the brain. We found 70 protein spots to be significantly differentially expressed between disease and control subjects (ANCOVA, p<0.05), 46 of which were subsequently identified by LC‐MS/MS. The proteins identified included novel disease candidates as well as proteins that have previously been reported as abnormal in schizophrenia, thus reinforcing their association with the disease. Furthermore, we confirmed the direction of change for three proteins using ELISA, namely neurofilament‐light, amphiphysin II, and Rab‐GDP‐α, in a subset of the Stanley Array Collection. In addition, altered expression of neurofilament‐light, amphiphysin II, and Rab‐GDP‐α was not observed in the cortex of mice chronically treated with haloperidol, making it less likely that these alterations are a consequence of neuroleptic medication. The data presented here strongly suggest disruption of the cytoskeleton and its associated signal transduction proteins in schizophrenia, and to a lesser extent in bipolar disorder.
Keywords:2‐D DIGE  Cytoskeleton  Schizophrenia
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