AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aims to advance the diagnosis and treatment of schizophrenia by identifying blood biomarkers, moving away from solely subjective assessments of clinical symptoms.
  • - Researchers conducted a detailed proteomic analysis of plasma samples from 48 schizophrenia patients and 50 healthy individuals, using advanced techniques to evaluate protein presence.
  • - Findings revealed unique proteins in schizophrenia patients that are linked to key biological processes, enhancing the understanding of the disorder's molecular mechanisms and potential therapeutic targets.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The high prevalence of schizophrenia worldwide makes it necessary to proceed from subjective assessment of patient's clinical symptoms in diagnosis making to searching for circulating blood biomarkers. On the one hand, searching for molecular markers and targets for therapeutics will make it possible to refine and detail the molecular mechanisms of pathology development, while on the other hand, it will offer new opportunities for elaborating novel approaches to disease diagnosis and enhance efficacy and timeliness of drug therapy.

Methods: In this study, we performed an extended-range proteomic analysis of plasma samples collected from 48 study subjects with confirmed diagnosis of schizophrenia and 50 healthy volunteers. The high-resolution tandem mass spectra recorded in the data-dependent acquisition mode were analyzed using the MaxQuant algorithm for the library of known protein sequences and the PowerNovo algorithm for protein sequencing.

Results: It was demonstrated that both strategies show similar results for high-abundance proteins (≥1 μg/mL). For mid-abundance (10 ng/mL - 1 μg/mL) and low-abundance (<10 ng/mL) proteins, the results obtained by the two search strategies complement each other.

Discussion: Group-specific proteins for the samples of schizophrenia patients were identified, presumably being involved in synaptic plasticity, angiogenesis, transcriptional regulation, protein stabilization and degradation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11617367PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2024.1483933DOI Listing

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