Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Schizophrenia study finds new biomarker, drug candidate in mice

read original more articles
Why This Matters

This groundbreaking research introduces a novel biomarker and potential drug candidate for schizophrenia, focusing on cognitive symptoms that current treatments fail to address. If successful in humans, this approach could revolutionize how the disorder is treated, improving quality of life for millions affected worldwide. It highlights the importance of targeted, biomarker-based therapies in advancing mental health treatment options.

Key Takeaways

Current schizophrenia medications treat symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions, but do little for cognitive symptoms like disorganized thinking or executive dysfunction. As a result, many patients are unable to work, rely on family for lifelong support, become homeless or, in some cases, experience suicidal thoughts and actions.

A new Northwestern University study in humans and mice has discovered a novel biomarker of schizophrenia that could also serve as a new drug candidate to treat the cognitive symptoms of the disorder. Schizophrenia affects .5% of the world’s population, including about two million people in the U.S. The study was published in the journal Neuron.

“A lot of people with schizophrenia cannot integrate well into society because of these cognitive deficits,” said corresponding author Peter Penzes, professor of neuroscience, pharmacology and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “Our discovery could solve these challenges by establishing the basis of a revolutionary and completely novel treatment strategy through a tandem biomarker-peptide therapeutic approach.”

Penzes also is the director of the Center for Autism and Neurodevelopment at Feinberg.

Adding synthetic protein corrects abnormal brain circuit activity

By examining the cerebral spinal fluid of more than 100 schizophrenia patients and healthy controls, the scientists identified a previously unknown, freely circulating form of a brain protein called Cacna2d1. In patients with schizophrenia, levels of this protein signal are reduced compared to controls, the study found, which results in overactive or overexcited brain circuits.

The team created a synthetic version of the protein (named SEAD1) and tested it in a mouse model of genetic schizophrenia. A single injection of SEAD1 into the animals’ brains corrected both the abnormal brain circuit activity — and the behavioral problems linked to the disorder. Importantly, the treatment did not cause observable negative side effects, such as sedation or reduced movement, the study authors said.

“Our treatment reopens a crucial window to rewire connections in adult brains,” said first author Marc Dos Santos, research assistant professor of neuroscience at Feinberg. “The lack of brain plasticity is believed to be a key factor in the development of symptoms in schizophrenia. Reforming synapses could also be beneficial for other mental disorders, such as depression.”

Dos Santos said the team does not yet know how long the therapeutic effects last, but they plan to study this aspect in future experiments. The research team is now optimizing this protein for future clinical trials in patients with 16p11.2 duplication syndrome, which is associated with a tenfold risk of developing schizophrenia, Penzes said.

Why a biomarker for a psychiatric disorder is so important

... continue reading