Focal Adhesion Dynamics Are Altered in Schizophrenia
Author
Abstract
Background: Evidence from genetic association studies implicate genes involved in neural migration associated with schizophrenia
risk. Neural stem/progenitor cell cultures (neurosphere-derived cells) from olfactory mucosa of schizophrenia patients have significantly
dysregulated expression of genes in focal adhesion kinase (FAK) signaling, a key pathway regulating cell adhesion and migration. The
aim of this study was to investigate whether olfactory neurosphere-derived cells from schizophrenia patients have altered cell adhesion,
cell motility, and focal adhesion dynamics.
Methods: Olfactory neurosphere-derived cells from nine male schizophrenia patients and nine male healthy control subjects were
used. Cells were assayed for cell adhesion and cell motility and analyzed for integrins and FAK proteins. Focal adhesions were counted
and measured in fixed cells, and time-lapse imaging was used to assess cell motility and focal adhesion dynamics.
Results: Patient-derived cells were less adhesive and more motile than cells derived from healthy control subjects, and their motility
was reduced to control cell levels by integrin-blocking antibodies and by inhibition of FAK. Vinculin-stained focal adhesion complexes
were significantly smaller and fewer in patient cells. Time-lapse imaging of cells expressing FAK tagged with green fluorescent protein
revealed that the disassembly of focal adhesions was significantly faster in patient cells.
Conclusions: The evidence for altered motility and focal adhesion dynamics in patient-derived cells is consistent with dysregulated
gene expression in the FAK signaling pathway in these cells. Alterations in cell adhesion dynamics and cell motility could bias the
trajectory of brain development in schizophrenia.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129149
DOI: DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.01.020
Quote Item
BIOL PSYCHIATRY 2013;74:418–426
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