AI Article Synopsis

  • Research indicates that the immuno-inflammatory pathway may influence the risk and progression of schizophrenia, particularly through prenatal infections leading to maternal immune activation and increased IL-6 levels in offspring.
  • * The study focused on the link between a specific genetic variant (14 bp INDEL polymorphism) of the HLA-G gene and IL-6 gene expression in 56 schizophrenia patients versus 99 healthy controls.
  • * Results showed that schizophrenia patients have lower IL-6 expression, especially those with the Del/Del genotype of HLA-G, suggesting that HLA-G may help reduce inflammation related to schizophrenia.

Article Abstract

Converging evidence suggests important implications of immuno-inflammatory pathway in the risk and progression of schizophrenia. Prenatal infection resulting in maternal immune activation and developmental neuroinflammation reportedly increases the risk of schizophrenia in the offspring by generating pro-inflammatory cytokines including IL-6. However, it is not known how prenatal infection can induce immuno-inflammatory responses despite the presence of immuno-inhibitory Human Leukocyte Antigen-G (HLA-G) molecules. To address this, the present study was aimed at examining the correlation between 14 bp Insertion/Deletion (INDEL) polymorphism of HLA-G and IL-6 gene expression in schizophrenia patients. The 14 bp INDEL polymorphism was studied by PCR amplification/direct sequencing and IL-6 gene expression was quantified by using real-time RT-PCR in 56 schizophrenia patients and 99 healthy controls. We observed significantly low IL6 gene expression in the peripheral mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of schizophrenia patients (t = 3.8, p = .004) compared to the controls. In addition, schizophrenia patients carrying Del/Del genotype of HLA-G 14 bp INDEL exhibited significantly lower IL6 gene expression (t = 3.1; p = .004) than the Del/Ins as well as Ins/Ins carriers. Our findings suggest that presence of "high-expressor" HLA-G 14 bp Del/Del genotype in schizophrenia patients could attenuate IL-6 mediated inflammation in schizophrenia. Based on these findings it can be assumed that HLA-G and cytokine interactions might play an important role in the immunological underpinnings of schizophrenia.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cyto.2017.11.016DOI Listing

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