Publications by authors named "C Scorer"

The molecular basis of schizophrenia is poorly understood; however, different brain regions are believed to play distinct roles in disease symptomology. We have studied gene expression in the superior temporal cortex (Brodmann area 22; BA22), which may play a role in positive pathophysiology, and compared our results with data from the anterior prefrontal cortex (BA10), which shows evidence for a role in negative symptoms. Genome-wide mRNA expression was determined in the BA22 region in 23 schizophrenics and 19 controls and compared with a BA10 data set from the same subjects.

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Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder with a world-wide prevalence of 1%. The pathophysiology of the illness is not understood, but is thought to have a strong genetic component with some environmental influences on aetiology. To gain further insight into disease mechanism, we used microarray technology to determine the expression of over 30 000 mRNA transcripts in post-mortem tissue from a brain region associated with the pathophysiology of the disease (Brodmann area 10: anterior prefrontal cortex) in 28 schizophrenic and 23 control patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A study focused on understanding the relationship between the structure and activity of a specific compound (1) in drug development.
  • - The research led to the discovery of sulfonamide (25), which targets multiple brain receptors (dopamine D2/D3 and serotonin 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, 5-HT6) for treating schizophrenia.
  • - Compound (25) demonstrated effective activity in living organisms without causing extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), which are common side effects in schizophrenia treatments.
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