hdl:10101/npre.2009.3905.1
0 votes

The Role of Neuregulin 1 in Schizophrenia: A Bioinformatics Approach

Alvaro M. Dias1, Vinicius V. M. C. Maracaja-Coutinho2 & Artur A. Q. L. Lopo3

Correspondence: (Login to view email address)

  1. University of São Paulo, Institute of Psychology, Dept. of Neuroscience and Behavior
  2. University of São Paulo, Institute of Biology, Dept. of Biochemistry
  3. University of São Paulo, Institute of Biology, Dept. of Biosciences
Document Type:
Manuscript
Date:
Received 27 October 2009 21:54 UTC; Posted 28 October 2009
Subjects:
Genetics & Genomics, Neuroscience, Bioinformatics
Tags:
Abstract:

Context: Notwithstanding the great number of studies on the etiology and pathophysiology of schizophrenia, both issues remain far from being fully understood. Schizophrenia seems to be related to several biochemical abnormalities, which point to a multi-factor etiology and pathophysiology, as well as to the perspective that several etiologically diverse disorders might coexist within this nosographic entity. On the other hand, identical twins reveal a high concordance for schizophrenia. From that standpoint, the perspective that structurally-related proteins may play an important and yet non-deterministic role seems attractive. Among these proteins, it is suggestive that Neuregulin 1 exerts a pivotal role.
Objective: This paper aims to uncover the most prominent relations that Neuregulin 1 establishes with schizophrenia.
Method: Several bioinformatical methods are used in order to present:
1. A visual representation of Neuregulin 1’s main molecular pathways, associated with a discussion about their importance to schizophrenia research;
2. A new heatmap of Neuregulin 1 and its receptor’s expression in brain tissues most relevant to the understanding of schizophrenia, created after the development of new R programming scripts (described elsewhere), which facilitate the analysis of gene expression profiles in public datasets;
3. A conceptual map of the literature retrieved using the keywords ‘Neuregulin 1 and human’ in PubMed, followed by a discussion of the most relevant sub-topics.
Results: Neuregulin 1 polymorphisms affect several brain tissues and contribute to the etiology and pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Suggestively, Neuregulin 1 partially bridges the ‘molecular gap’ that schizophrenia establishes in relation to bipolar disorder and Alzheimer disease, which involves genes that affect several brain networks, at the same time that they are highly dependent on noxious environmental variables to be triggered.

Discussion

Votes:

0 votes

(Login to vote)

Comments:

0 comments

(Login to post a comment)

(Login to share with a colleague)

Additional information

License:
This document is licensed to the public under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
How to cite this document:

Dias, Alvaro, Maracaja-Coutinho, Vinicius, and Lopo, Artur. The Role of Neuregulin 1 in Schizophrenia: A Bioinformatics Approach. Available from Nature Precedings <http://hdl.handle.net/10101/npre.2009.3905.1> (2009)

Version info:

Other versions of this document in Nature Precedings

None.

Other versions of this document elsewhere on the web

None known.

Participate

Related Documents

Advertisement