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People with schizophrenia aged 55 years and above are about to become 25% of the total population with the disease. Yet only 1% of the schizophrenia research budget relates to older adults. So it is not surprising that much about the natural history of schizophrenia in this group remains unclear. To what extent is it really a quiescent disease at this stage in life? How does cognitive function change with time?
Data from New York City, presented by Carl Cohen (SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, USA) casts light on what is happening in people with schizophrenia in mid to late life (55 years plus) and living in the community.
The starting point was a group of 250 who had developed schizophrenia before the age of 45. They were outpatients and did not have moderate or severe cognitive deficits or complicating factors such as a history of head trauma at baseline. Those living independently represented 39% of the sample: the others were in some form of supported residence. They were matched at baseline with 113 controls matched for age and income.
The cognition situation in older people is dynamic: some improve, others decline
At the start of the study, people with schizophrenia had a mean Dementia Rating Scale (DRS) score of 128, not far below the score of 138 among controls, but perhaps indicative of mild cognitive impairment.
As expected, there was considerable loss to follow-up, not least because of death. But those lost were similar to those who could be re-contacted. After a median follow-up of 4.5 years, the mean score of 127 among 104 people with schizophrenia showed no change. But this did not mean that no px had changed. While 59% showed essentially the same score at follow-up, 21% had experienced a decline in cognition – defined as a fall of 0.5 SD per year – and 19% had shown improvement -- defined as an increase in score of 0.5 SD per year. So the cognition the situation is actually quite dynamic.
On multivariate analysis, those whose cognition scores improved had had poorer scores at baseline. So there may be some regression to the mean. Though pxs living independently had better cognition at baseline, those living in supported housing were less likely to show decline over the period of follow-up, perhaps because of greater access to services.
Although an estimated 8% of the human genome is of retroviral origin, acquired during millions of years of primate evolution, most of it is now junk. It has been inactivated by mutation or epigenetic processes such as methylation. But what if some of it is capable of re-activation, perhaps by infections during embryonic development?
Though he repeatedly acknowledged that the idea is highly speculative, Awais Aftab (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA) presented the argument that Human Endogenous Retroviruses (HERVS), particularly the HERV-W family, may play a malign role in the causation of schizophrenia.
There is evidence that HERV-W nucleotide sequences are more common in those affected with schizophrenia than in controls. The HERV-W envelope protein seems to activate production of inflammatory cytokines, which might contribute to the inflammation story in schizophrenia. And infections linked to schizophrenia can activate HERV-W elements, perhaps through demethylation of relevant genes.
In combination with genetic predisposition and environmental factors, archaeological remnants of millennia-old viral RNA could set the developing brain on the path towards schizophrenia and so provide a missing link in causation, at least in some patients. It is a suggestion worth considering.
Access to a small number of data packages for candidate agents has already been attained and interest in some of the 9 drugs so far collected is already apparent.
Over the past three years, The Medicine Chests Initiative has been taking shape, the purpose of which is to gain access to ‘failed’ compounds and facilitate their reinvestigation, ideally in clinical experimental studies. Indeed, should it be necessary, resynthesis of interesting compounds is being and could be considered (albeit via. research grants) should an agent no longer be physically available. As these agents have already been administered in patients, toxicological studies are unlikely to be needed, as toxicology reports are included in the Medicines Chest repository.
As Dr Ann Hayes, UK, explained, access to a small number of data packages for candidate agents has already been attained and interest in some of the 9 drugs so far collected is already apparent.
Dr Trevor Robbins, UK, outlined how he has applied for a research grant to investigate whether a D1 receptor antagonist previously developed in Alzheimer’s disease might be used both to further investigate the basic science underlying D1 receptor antagonism and also the effect of this drug on cognition – an area of research in which it has not previously been investigated in clinical patients but one now considered worth of pursuit.
To find out more about the Medicines Chest and the agents available go to https://www.ecnp.eu/projects-initiatives/ECNP-medicines-chest.aspx
What does a pharmaceutical company do with a psychotherapeutic drug once it fails in clinical trials? As often as not, it bins it.
Professor Xiao-Jing Wang, New York University & NYU Shanghai, USA & China, shared developments in the computational modeling of GABA microcircuitry and cognitive deficits in schizophrenia.
Professor Wang seeks to understand the dynamic behaviour and function of neural circuits. He investigates neural mechanisms and computational principles of cognitive processes - such as decision making and working memory - using theoretical and modeling approaches. Neural network modeling is a valuable tool to bridge the gaps between levels of investigation that would be difficult to achieve experimentally. Accurate microcircuit models may direct our approach to treating mental disorders, including schizophrenia.
Neural network modeling allows us to bridge the gaps between levels of investigation that would be difficult to achieve experimentally.
Mental disorders mainly involve cognitive-type brain systems, such as the prefrontal cortex (PFC) - often called "the CEO of the brain". Professor Wang has investigated the microcircuit properties that enable a cortical area, such as the PFC, to carry out cognitive functions. Wang proposed that the cognitive function of cortical areas is due to an interplay between slow reverberating excitation and competitive synaptic inhibition.
Working memory is a key cognitive function that is impaired in mental disorders. Using computational circuit modeling of the PFC, Professor Wang has shown that working memory deficits in schizophrenia arise from an inability to filter out distractors that are behaviourally irrelevant - rather than problems with working memory storage. This interesting finding was confirmed by human study.
The prefrontal cortex is often called "the CEO of the brain".
Resistance against distractors in a working memory circuit depends on several subtypes of interneurons, soma-, dendrite-, and interneuron-targeting interneurons, which are all modulated differently by dopamine.
Professor Wang suggested a novel perspective on GABA signaling impairment in mental disorders. The GABA system consists of several inhibitory cell types. Different types of interneurons can set up a gating mechanism that is used by the brain to flexibly route information flow to the right place at the right time - based on behavioural demands. Diverse GABAergic cell types are found throughout the brain. Their functions need to be fully investigated - both experimentally and theoretically - using large-scale, cross-level, brain circuit modeling.
A novel perspective on GABA signaling impairment in mental disorders.
Professor Thomas Klausberger, Medical University Vienna, Austria, discussed the contribution of distinct types of GABAergic interneurons to working memory and decision making.
The cerebral cortex is made up of highly diverse neuronal types, including excitatory pyramidal cells, and GABAergic inhibitory interneurons - which control the activity and timing of pyramidal cells. Professor Klausberger is investigating how distinct types of neurons support the executive functions of the PFC.
Freely-moving rats performed a delayed cue-matching-to-place task, which involves working memory and decision making. The rats were given a stimulus - either chocolate or cherry - and after a six second delay they ran either down the left path (chocolate) or the right path (cherry). A reward was at the end of the road for those rats that made the right choice - based on the initial stimulus.
During this task, GABAergic interneurons and pyramidal cells in the PFC were recorded using the juxtacellular recording and labelling technique - and their contribution to network oscillations investigated.
Two groups of pyramidal neurons showed task-related firing patterns - neurons that represented the future goal and those that fired during distinct periods of the task. Distinct types of interneurons modulated these firing patterns.
Distinct types of GABAergic interneurons contribute to working memory and decision making.
By recording identified neurons, Professor Klausberger has shown how distinct types of neurons contribute to prefrontal network operations and executive behaviour. These results indicate that GABAergic interneurons release GABA at distinct times to different domains of pyramidal cells - like percussions in music.
GABAergic interneurons release GABA at distinct times - like percussions in music.
Professor John Krystal, Yale University, USA, and CINP President Elect, spoke about GABA-related dysfunctional cortical activity in schizophrenia.
Molecular and cellular changes have been observed in post-mortem tissue from patients who had schizophrenia. But we don’t yet know how these alterations cause schizophrenia’s characteristic symptoms and cognitive impairment.
Professor Krystal and colleagues analyzed healthy subjects and patients with schizophrenia using functional MRI (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG). They also looked at healthy subjects given the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R) antagonist, ketamine - which causes similar symptoms to and is a pharmacological model of schizophrenia. The results were interpreted alongside relevant computational neuroscience models of the behaviour of cortical micro- and macro-circuits.
Professor Krystal described different types of network disinhibition seen in these studies.
One of those is pathological hyperconnectivity - a feature of early course (high-risk, first episode) schizophrenia that is associated with symptoms of psychosis. Long-term hyperconnectivity produces volume loss in schizophrenia. In first episode schizophrenia, hippocampal hypermetabolic regions predict volume loss in chronic psychosis.
The signal properties of cortical functional connectivity change as schizophrenia progresses. This finding opens the door for phase-specific pharmacotherapy - treating schizophrenia differently at different stages of the illness.
Schizophrenia has a dynamic neurobiology that changes over the course of the illness.
Schizophrenia is associated with heterogeneous pathophysiologies - a finding which has not been adequately addressed by treatment efforts.
Professor Krystal drew attention to the time-dependent neurobiological evolution of schizophrenia. Based on the idea that schizophrenia has a dynamic neurobiology that changes over the course of the illness, he proposed phase-specific pharmacotherapy. The disinhibitory phase - early course of the illness - can be targeted with treatments that restore inhibition. But in the atrophic, chronic phase, inhibitory treatments may worsen deficits in synaptic connectivity.
The developmental neurobiology of schizophrenia needs to be characterized further - to enable us to treat patients better. Such studies should use our knowledge of the genetics and epigenetics of schizophrenia.
It is hoped that neurodevelopmental and homeostatic processes may allow us to identify time-dependent sources of cortical network dysfunction that correspond with the clinical phases of schizophrenia.
Professor Etienne Sibille, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Canada, changed the direction of the symposium as he presented findings on GABA-related cellular and molecular pathology in depression.
Somatostatin (SST) is a selective marker for GABA neurons that regulates pyramidal cell dendrites. SST is reduced in major depressive disorder (MDD). In fact, low SST is also reported in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy and other conditions. SST may be a vulnerable biological module in the brain.
The important questions are, does low SST contribute to psychiatric symptoms, particularly mood disorders? And does targeting low SST have antidepressant potential?
Exploring new drug targets in depression.
Professor Sibille described human postmortem molecular studies and animal genetic and pharmacological studies as he addressed these questions.
Genetic studies in mice suggested that low SST and reduced SST-positive GABA neurons have a role in causing mood symptoms, and may be targets for novel antidepressants.
The function of SST-positive GABA neurons is mediated by post-synaptic GABA-A receptors that contain the alpha5 subunit. These receptors are found mostly in the hippocampus and cortex. Boosting alpha5-mediated GABA function (through positive allosteric modulation) has antidepressant activity in mice.
Professor Sibille also described another potential new drug target - based on the idea that altered eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (EIF2) signaling may be linked to dysregulation of SST expression and high emotionality. He and colleagues have shown that activating EIF2 signaling through EIF2 kinase inhibition diminished stress-induced behavioural emotionality in mice.
CINP symposia bring together the latest advances in basic, clinical and translational neuropsychopharmacology relevant to mental illness and treatment.