Linkage And Association Studies Of Schizophrenia In An Isolated Population.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$693,726.00
Summary
The cause of schizophrenia is unknown, but there is good evidence that genes play a role. Geneticists do not fully understand how the disease is inherited, but it is very complex, and several interacting genes as well as environmental factors are likely involved. To address this complexity, we have recruited large schizophrenia pedigrees from the Iban of Sarawak, a geographically and genetically isolated population. This sample will help clarify the genetics of this devastating illness.
High-Throughput Screening Of The Genome And Proteome In Postmortem CNS From Subjects With Schizophrenia
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$553,190.00
Summary
Schizophrenia is a serious psychiatric illness that effects ~1% of the Australia population. The underlying pathology of the illness remains unknown. This application seeks funding to use new technologies to screen approximately 60% of the expressed human genome and proteome to determine which genes are being differentially expressed in two regions thought to be important in generating the symptoms of the illness, the frontal cortex and hippocampus. This project will generate a large amount of d ....Schizophrenia is a serious psychiatric illness that effects ~1% of the Australia population. The underlying pathology of the illness remains unknown. This application seeks funding to use new technologies to screen approximately 60% of the expressed human genome and proteome to determine which genes are being differentially expressed in two regions thought to be important in generating the symptoms of the illness, the frontal cortex and hippocampus. This project will generate a large amount of data, however by comparing the data from subjects with schizophrenia to that from control subjects and subjects with bipolar disorder who were psychotic and being treated with antipsychotic drugs close to death will allow us to identify changes that are specific to schizophrenia. Genes that are expressing different levels of mRNA and protein will become prime targets for future investigations as they are likely to be central to the pathology of the illness.Read moreRead less
Twin and family studies show schizophrenia has a genetic basis. Attempts to find and characterise the underlying genes have not been successful so far. A main reason for this is that insufficient attention has been paid to the complexity of the underlying genetic architecture of the disorder. The pathway from genes to symptoms of schizophrenia is likely to involve elementary processes at neuronal and neural circuitry levels that vary between individuals and this variation is reflected in a grade ....Twin and family studies show schizophrenia has a genetic basis. Attempts to find and characterise the underlying genes have not been successful so far. A main reason for this is that insufficient attention has been paid to the complexity of the underlying genetic architecture of the disorder. The pathway from genes to symptoms of schizophrenia is likely to involve elementary processes at neuronal and neural circuitry levels that vary between individuals and this variation is reflected in a graded susceptibility to schizophrenia. During the last three years we have recruited a large number of families with at least one family member diagnosed with schizophrenia. The proband and all participating first-degree relatives have been assessed with a neurocognitive test battery including measures of sustained attention, working memory, speed of information processing, auditory verbal learning and executive function. Analysis of the neurocognitive data on this sample produced strong evidence that several measures are altered in patients with schizophrenia and a proportion of their asymptomatic first-degree relatives compared to unrelated normal controls. In the study we will systematically search the human genome for DNA markers linked to these measures. This will set the stage for the systematic search and characterisation of the underlying genes. This will allow us to better understand the predisposition to develop schizophrenia. In the individual case it is likely that this vulnerability results from a high-risk combination of a number of relatively common alleles which contribute to basic neural processes.Read moreRead less