Gulf News

Genetic variant causing schizophre­nia identified

RTN4R leads to the severe mental disorder, which often appears in early adulthood

-

Scientists have identified a rare genetic variant that may have a fundamenta­l role in the developmen­t of schizophre­nia — a chronic and severe mental disorder that affects over 21 million people worldwide.

It is known that more than 80 per cent of schizophre­nia cases have a hereditary cause, but the new study identified RTN4R gene variant that leads to the complicate­d disorder, which often appears in early adulthood. “Schizophre­nia is a disease caused by disturbanc­es in neural circuits. Myelin-related genes are associated with the disease,” said Toshihide Yamashita, professor at Osaka University in Japan.

Myelin, which acts as a conductor of signals for the neural circuits, could contribute to the pathology of schizophre­nia.

RTN4R is a subunit of RTN4, which regulates crucial functions for neural circuits, namely, axon regenerati­on and structural plasticity. Moreover, “RTN4 is a promising candidate gene for schizophre­nia because it is located at chromosome 22q11.2 — a hot spot for schizophre­nia”, Yamashita said.

In the study, published in Translatio­nal Psychiatry, the team searched for rare variants of RTN4 by screening the DNA of 370 schizophre­nia patients.

They found a single missense mutation — R292H — that changed the amino acid of this protein from arginine to histidine, proving that rare variants could act as risk factors for schizophre­nia.

“There is growing evidence that rare variants contribute to neurodevel­opment diseases. Our findings strengthen the evidence that rare variants could contribute to schizophre­nia,” Yamashita said.

They found a single missense mutation — R292H — that changed the amino acid of this protein from arginine to histidine, proving that rare variants could act as risk factors for schizophre­nia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates