Variation in GRM3 affects cognition, prefrontal glutamate, and risk for schizophrenia
Adult
Genotype
Prefrontal Cortex
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Middle Aged
Neuropsychological Tests
Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate
Hippocampus
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
03 medical and health sciences
Cognition
Phenotype
0302 clinical medicine
Glutamates
Haplotypes
Schizophrenia
Humans
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.0405077101
Publication Date:
2004-08-14T01:32:56Z
AUTHORS (17)
ABSTRACT
GRM3
,
a metabotropic glutamate receptor-modulating synaptic glutamate, is a promising schizophrenia candidate gene. In a family-based association study, a common
GRM3
haplotype was strongly associated with schizophrenia (
P
= 0.0001). Within this haplotype, the A allele of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) 4 (hCV11245618) in intron 2 was slightly overtransmitted to probands (
P
= 0.02). We studied the effects of this SNP on neurobiological traits related to risk for schizophrenia and glutamate neurotransmission. The SNP4 A allele was associated with poorer performance on several cognitive tests of prefrontal and hippocampal function. The physiological basis of this effect was assessed with functional MRI, which showed relatively deleterious activation patterns in both cortical regions in control subjects homozygous for the SNP4 A allele. We next looked at SNP4's effects on two indirect measures of prefrontal glutamate neurotransmission. Prefrontal
N
-acetylaspartate, an
in vivo
MRI measure related to synaptic activity and closely correlated with tissue glutamate, was lower in SNP4 AA homozygotes. In postmortem human prefrontal cortex, AA homozygotes had lower mRNA levels of the glial glutamate transporter EAAT2, a protein regulated by
GRM3
that critically modulates synaptic glutamate. Effects of SNP4 on prefrontal GRM3 mRNA and protein levels were marginal. Resequencing revealed no missense or splice-site SNPs, suggesting that the intronic SNP4 or related haplotypes may exert subtle regulatory effects on GRM3 transcription. These convergent data point to a specific molecular pathway by which GRM3 genotype alters glutamate neurotransmission, prefrontal and hippocampal physiology and cognition, and thereby increased risk for schizophrenia.
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