Recent MRI studies demonstrate progressive changes in gray matter in temporal and frontal corticesfollowing onset of schizophrenia. Far less, however, is known about white matter abnormalities, particularlyfronto-temporal connections, long thought to be abnormal in schizophrenia. Additionally, post-mortemstudies indicate that astrocytes and oligodendrocytes may be abnormal. Since glial cells play an importantrole in neuronal migration and in synaptic function, their dysfunction could lead to reduced neuronal size,reduced levels of synaptic proteins, as well as to abnormalities in neurotransmission and functionaldysconnectivity. Of further note, recent genetic studies point to oligodendrocyte and myelin related (OMR)abnormalities. Taken together, these findings indicate that an investigation of white matter may lead to afurther understanding of the neuropathology of schizophrenia. The main aim of this project is to investigateevidence for vulnerability to progression of white matter abnormalities in schizophrenia, at various stages ofthe illness (i.e., before, at first onset, long after illness onset), in order to delineate possible putative markers.Subjects will be: (1) 75 prodrome at risk subjects at study entry and at 1-year follow-up, and for those whoconvert to a first episode of schizophrenia, also at time of entry into the first episode study; (2) 80 firstepisode schizophrenia, defined by first hospitalization, at study entry.and followed at 6-mths and 18-mths; (3)42 patients diagnosed with chronic schizophrenia. Normal controls will be group matched for age, gender,etc., to each cohort. We will use Diffusion Tensor Imaging to evaluate fronto-temporal white matter fiberconnections (uncinate fasciculus, cingulate bundle, arcuate fasciculus, and fornix), corpus callosum, anteriorcommissure, and anterior limb of internal capsule, where we predict decreased anisotropy in chronicschizophrenics>first episode with changes at 18 months>first episode changes at 6 months>prodromes whoconvert>prodromes who do not convert. We also predict associations with OMR genes, where we will testfor association between gene sequence variants (single nucleotide polymorphisms-SNPs) for six OMRgenes (NRG1, ErbBS, MAG, CNP, MOG, GRM3). (See also Postmortem Core for isolation of mRNA from 4OMR genes-ErbB3, MAG, CNP, MOG). This proposal will provide new discoveries relevant to white matterprogression in schizophrenia, which will likely lead to new treatment and preventative strategies.
Showing the most recent 10 out of 156 publications