Publication | Open Access
Effects of schizophrenomimetics on the expression of the CCN1 (CYR 61) gene encoding a matricellular protein in the infant and adult neocortex of the mouse and rat
19
Citations
29
References
2007
Year
PsychopharmacologySocial SciencesMatricellular ProteinExperimental NeuropathologyCcn1 GeneNeurochemistryAcute Systemic AdministrationPsychiatryCcn1 Gene TranscriptsAdult NeocortexNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemDopaminePharmacologyCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyCyr 61SchizophreniaNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
The acute systemic administration of a schizophrenomimetic phencyclidine [5 or 10 mg/kg, subcutaneously (s.c.)] markedly up-regulated the neocortical expression of the CCN1 gene encoding a secreted extracellular matrix-associated protein at postnatal day 56, but not at postnatal day 8, after 60 min in the mouse and rat. The development-dependent nature of the up-regulation between postnatal days 8 and 56 seems to be similar to that of the adult type phencyclidine-induced abnormal behaviours, which have been considered to be models of schizophrenic symptoms. In the young adult rat, 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg phencyclidine (given s.c.) induced an increase in the CCN1 gene transcripts in a dose-related and bell-shaped manner with a maximum at the dose of 10 mg/kg, 60 min post-injection. Other schizophrenomimetics, dizocilpine (1 mg/kg) and methamphetamine (4.8 mg/kg), also caused a prominent up-regulation of the neocortical expression of the CCN1 gene in adult rats. These results indicate that the CCN1 gene or protein could be implicated in a molecular cascade associated with the age-dependent onset of schizophrenia that usually occurs after puberty.
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