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Scientific Overview Research Interest Summary Principal Investigators    Yuri Bushkin, Ph.D.
   Loren Day, Ph.D.
   Karl Drlica, Ph.D.
   David Dubnau, Ph.D.
   Marila Gennaro, M.D.
   Gilla Kaplan, Ph.D.
   Fred Kramer, Ph.D.
   Barry Kreiswirth, Ph.D.
   Leonard Mindich, Ph.D.
   Harvey Penefsky, Ph.D.
   David Perlin, Ph.D.
   Richard Pine, Ph.D.
   Abraham Pinter, Ph.D.
   Issar Smith, Ph.D.
   Patricia Soteropoulos, Ph.D.
   Sanjay Tyagi, Ph.D.
   David Wah, Ph.D.
   Shuishu Wang, Ph.D.

   Research Faculty
   Xilin Zhao, Ph.D.

Junior Faculty Members Research Grants
 
Fred Kramer, Ph.D.
 



Recent Articles

Dracheva S, Marras SA, Elhakem SL, Kramer FR, Davis KL, Haroutunian V.
N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor expression in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of elderly patients with schizophrenia.
Am J Psychiatry. 2001 Sep;158(9):1400-10
Erratum in: Am J Psychiatry 2001 Dec;158(12):2107
PMID: 11532724

OBJECTIVE: The N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) class of glutamate receptors has received attention in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia because of the similarity between some schizophrenic symptoms and symptoms caused by NMDA antagonists. To determine if NMDA receptor abnormalities were present at the mRNA level, expression of NMDA receptor (NR) subunits NR(1), NR(2A), and NR(2B) was measured in specimens from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the occipital cortex of elderly patients with schizophrenia and normal elderly subjects.

METHOD: Postmortem specimens from antemortem assessed and diagnosed elderly patients with schizophrenia (N=26) were compared with those from a neuropathologically and neuropsychiatrically normal elderly comparison group (N=13) and from patients with Alzheimer's disease (N=10). The mRNA expression of the NR(1), NR(2A), and NR(2B) subunits and of postsynaptic density 95 (PSD-95), a protein associated with postsynaptic NMDA receptors, was studied with quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction.

RESULTS: Expression of NR(1) and NR(2A) but not NR(2B) subunits was higher in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the occipital cortex of patients with schizophrenia than in the normal and Alzheimer's disease groups. In contrast, NR(1) expression was significantly lower in the Alzheimer's disease group. Occipital cortex expression of PSD-95 was higher in the schizophrenic subjects and correlated strongly with the expression of NR(2A) and NR(2B) in both cortical regions and with expression of NR(1) in the occipital cortex. These results were not influenced by neuroleptic exposure history, postmortem interval, or age of the subject.

CONCLUSIONS: NMDA receptor subunits are abnormally expressed in elderly patients with schizophrenia. The disproportionate expression of the NR(1) and NR(2A) subunits relative to NR(2B) expression may have implications for the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and the sensitivity of schizophrenic patients to glutamate and glutamatergic drugs.



 
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