Vahid Amirhassani, Bashdar Mahmud Hussen, Solat Eslami, Arezou Sayad, Soudeh Ghafouri-Fard
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a mental condition that impairs several aspects of brain function and behavior. Recent investigations highlighted abnormal function of numerous genes in this context. Notably, genes that affect oxidative stress and neuron damage were the focus of several studies. In an attempt to find a biomarker that can be quantified in the peripheral blood, we assessed blood expression of three lncRNAs that were associated with these processes in patients with schizophrenia and matched controls. We observed a statistically significant downregulation of SNHG5 in the patient group compared to healthy controls, with P-values of < 0.0001, 0.0008, and 0.003 in total, male, and female patients, respectively. LINC-PINT was also found to be down-regulated in all comparisons between patients and controls with P-values of < 0.0001, < 0.0001 and = 0.01, in total, male, and female patients, respectively. However, statistical analyses disclosed no notable difference in the expression of TP53TG1 between study subgroups. Most notably, LINC-PINT and SNHG5 could discriminate between patients and controls with acceptable AUC and specificity values. Cumulatively, the results of this study propose down-regulation of LINC-PINT and SNHG5 as a possible peripheral indicator of the presence of schizophrenia.
期刊介绍:
Biochemical Genetics welcomes original manuscripts that address and test clear scientific hypotheses, are directed to a broad scientific audience, and clearly contribute to the advancement of the field through the use of sound sampling or experimental design, reliable analytical methodologies and robust statistical analyses.
Although studies focusing on particular regions and target organisms are welcome, it is not the journal’s goal to publish essentially descriptive studies that provide results with narrow applicability, or are based on very small samples or pseudoreplication.
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