Reuters
|
While
many animal species suffer from psychiatric symptoms, schizophrenia is
specifically human. A new study has revealed that human speech and language
play a role in the disease.
New
research led by Dr. Joel Dudley from Mount Sinai hospital in
New York has shown that psychosis in humans may be due to the fact that our
brains have evolved to be larger and more complex than those of non-human
species.
RT.com reports:
Schizophrenia
affects one percent of adults and can be potentially lethal. It is also known
to be heavily genetic.
The
study examined a segment of the human genome called human accelerated regions,
or HAR’s. HARs are short stretches of DNA that underwent fast evolution in
humans when we split from chimpanzees. HARs often help regulate neighboring
genes.
In
order to determine whether there is a link between schizophrenia and HARs,
Dudley and his team culled data from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, which
had previously conducted a study identifying genetic variants associated with
schizophrenia. They found that HARS play a role in regulating the genes
associated with the disease.
The
scientists then turned to gene expression profiles, which reveal where and when
in the body certain genes are active. HAR-associated schizophrenia genes are
found in areas of the genome that influence genes in the prefrontal cortex
(PFC), a part of the brain involved in higher order thinking. When the
functions of the PFC are impaired, it is thought to contribute to psychosis.
These
genes are also crucial in the synaptic transmission of the neurotransmitter
GABA, which is an inhibitor or regulator of neuronal activity by suppressing
dopamine, which is thought to be involved in schizophrenia. When GABA
malfunctions, dopamine runs wild. This contributes to hallucinations and
delusions, which are symptoms of psychosis.
“The ultimate goal of the study was to see if
evolution may help provide additional insights into the genetic architecture of
schizophrenia so we can better understand and diagnose the disease,”
said Dudley to Scientific American.
The
research also shows how schizophrenia arose in humans in the first place; with
higher cognition, there is more that can go wrong in the brain.
“The emergence of human speech and language bears a
relationship with schizophrenia genetics, and incidentally also autism. Indeed,
language dysfunction is a feature of schizophrenia, and GABA is critical to
speech, language and many other aspects of higher-order cognition,”
Dudley said.
The researchers pointed out
that they still haven’t found any “smoking gun genes” that definitively
cause the disease, as the genetics behind schizophrenia is highly complex.
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