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Schizophrenia Linked To Gene Coding
U.S. researchers
have discovered abnormal functioning of a gene might be linked with schizophrenia.
The gene controls
the production of an enzyme essential to the production of GABA, a major
neurotransmitter essential for thinking, planning, and decision-making.
Although abnormalities in the synthesis of GABA have been known to play
a role in schizophrenia, the new study suggests a specific mechanism that
decreases production of GABA in the brain tissue of those suffering from
the severe mental disorder.
Dr. Schahram
Akbarian, doctoral student Sung Huang and colleagues at the University
of Massachusetts Medical School also found GABA production requires temporary
structural changes in certain proteins called histones. Interference in
those changes was also found in brain tissue from people with schizophrenia.
"This discovery
opens a new area for exploration of schizophrenia," said Dr. Thomas Insel,
director of the National Institute of Mental Health, which helped fund
the research.
The study appears
in the Journal of Neuroscience.
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