AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers identified that high levels of pentosidine (AGE) and low vitamin B6 were found in patients with schizophrenia, despite them not having renal dysfunction.
  • The study focused on carbonyl stress and found that protein carbonyl (PCO) levels were significantly elevated in schizophrenic patients compared to healthy individuals.
  • Western blot analysis revealed that PCOs, along with carbonylated albumin and IgG, could serve as potential new markers for a subtype of schizophrenia characterized by carbonyl stress.

Article Abstract

Although it's well known that protein carbonyl (PCO) and advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) levels are elevated in plasma from patients with renal dysfunction, we recently identified patients who had no renal dysfunction but possessed high levels of plasma pentosidine (PEN), which is an AGEs, and low vitamin B6 levels in serum. In this study, we investigated the status of carbonyl stress to characterize the subtype of schizophrenia. When plasma samples were subjected to Western blot analysis for various AGEs, clear differences were only observed with the anti-PEN antibody in the plasma from schizophrenic patients. Moreover, we determined the formation of protein carbonyl (PCO), a typical indicator of carbonyl stress, occurred prior to the accumulation of PEN in the plasma of schizophrenic patients. PCO levels in the plasma from schizophrenic patients were significantly higher than that from healthy subjects. Western blots analysis clearly showed that albumin and IgG were markedly carbonylated in the plasma of some patients. Thus, PCOs may be a novel marker of carbonyl stress-type schizophrenia in addition to albumin containing PEN structure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2015.09.152DOI Listing

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