Gene Link to
Schizophrenia Found
A genetic link to the symptoms of schizophrenia has been found,
according to researchers.

The study followed 200 young people,
all at a high risk of developing schizophrenia, for 10
years. |
|
(October 30, 2006) -- An Edinburgh University team found people carrying
a variant of a gene called neuregulin had a higher chance of developing
psychotic symptoms.
The findings, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, could
possibly point to new treatments.
Schizophrenia is known to run in families, and all of the volunteers had
two or more relatives with the condition. And being aged between 16 and 25
at the start of the study, they were on the cusp of the period when symptoms
were most likely to develop.
To investigate why some people go on to develop the condition and why
others do not, the researchers carried out interviews, brain scans,
psychological tests and genetic analysis.
They discovered participants who carried a variation of the neuregulin
gene were much more likely to develop psychotic symptoms associated with
schizophrenia, such as
paranoia or
hearing voices, than those without the
gene variant.
| "You have to understand more about what causes diseases before you can start designing treatments for it
Dr Jeremy Hall, Edinburgh University" |
|
Brain scans also revealed those carrying the variant gene were more
likely to show abnormal brain activity in the frontal and temporal regions -
areas often associated with schizophrenia.
Other studies have found the gene variant is involved with switching on
and off a gene associated with brain development.
Designing treatments
Dr Jeremy Hall, lead researcher on the paper, based at the division of
psychiatry, Edinburgh University, said: "These major mental illnesses have
really been for a very long time a big black box in terms of what is causing
them - it is not that long ago that people thought you got schizophrenia
because you had a bad mother. And treatments have not advanced a lot over
the last 50 years.
"You have to understand more about what causes diseases before you can
start designing treatments for it.
"These results help us to understand how a gene might alter brain
function and then cause symptoms, and could represent a target for
treatments in the future."
Dr James MacCabe of the Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London,
said: "It is a very interesting study, and, potentially, quite an exciting
one.
"We have known for years that schizophrenia had a genetic contribution,
but until quite recently no genes had been found.
"Over the past five years there have been about 10 possible genes
identified, and neuregulin is a very promising gene."
He said it was a relatively small study and would have to be repeated on
a much larger scale, but if the results held true the findings would be
significant.
"The next stage would be to understand how a defect in this gene causes
schizophrenia so as to understand the neurobiology of the disorder and
design treatments that could reduce the symptoms."
Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of the mental health charity Sane,
said: "There have been so many hopes of finding a gene for schizophrenia
which have ended in a cul-de-sac.
"If this latest research were to prove a breakthrough and lead to
understanding what causes schizophrenia, we could at last find more
effective treatments and potential cures, transforming the future for the
one in 100 who suffer from this devastating condition."
Source: BBC News
Last updated: 10/06
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