Prospects and Pitfalls of Plasma Complement C4 in Schizophrenia: Building a Better Biomarker.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q2 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Developmental Neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-21 DOI:10.1159/000534185
Emily G Severance, Emese Prandovszky, Shuojia Yang, Flora Leister, Ashley Lea, Ching-Lien Wu, Ryad Tamouza, Marion Leboyer, Faith Dickerson, Robert H Yolken
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Complex brain disorders like schizophrenia may have multifactorial origins related to mis-timed heritable and environmental factors interacting during neurodevelopment. Infections, inflammation, and autoimmune diseases are over-represented in schizophrenia leading to immune system-centered hypotheses. Complement component C4 is genetically and neurobiologically associated with schizophrenia, and its dual activity peripherally and in the brain makes it an exceptional target for biomarker development. Studies to evaluate the biomarker potential of plasma or serum C4 in schizophrenia do so to understand how peripheral C4 might reflect central nervous system-derived neuroinflammation, synapse pruning, and other mechanisms. This effort, however, has produced mostly conflicting results, with peripheral C4 sometimes elevated, reduced, or unchanged between comparison groups. We undertook a pilot biomarker development study to systematically identify sociodemographic, genetic, and immune-related variables (autoimmune, infection-related, gastrointestinal, inflammatory), which may be associated with plasma C4 levels in schizophrenia (SCH; n = 335) and/or in nonpsychiatric comparison subjects (NCs; n = 233). As with previously inconclusive studies, we detected no differences in plasma C4 levels between SCH and NCs. In contrast, levels of general inflammation, C-reactive protein (CRP), were significantly elevated in SCH compared to NCs (ANOVA, F = 20.74, p < 0.0001), suggestive that plasma C4 and CRP may reflect different sources or causes of inflammation. In multivariate regressions of C4 gene copy number variants, plasma C4 levels were correlated only for C4A (not C4B, C4L, C4S) and only in NCs (R Coeff = 0.39, CI = 0.01-0.77, R2 = 0.18, p < 0.01; not SCH). Other variables associated with plasma C4 levels only in NCs included sex, double-stranded DNA IgG, tissue-transglutaminase (TTG) IgG, and cytomegalovirus IgG. Toxoplasma gondii IgG was the only variable significantly correlated with plasma C4 in SCH but not in NCs. Many variables were associated with plasma C4 in both groups (body mass index, race, CRP, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) NR2 subunit IgG, TTG IgA, lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP), and soluble CD14 (sCD14). While the direction of most C4 associations was positive, autoimmune markers tended to be inverse, and associated with reduced plasma C4 levels. When NMDAR-NR2 autoantibody-positive individuals were removed, plasma C4 was elevated in SCH versus NCs (ANOVA, F = 5.16, p < 0.02). Our study was exploratory and confirmation of the many variables associated with peripheral C4 requires replication. Our preliminary results point toward autoimmune factors and exposure to the pathogen, T. gondii, as possibly significant contributors to variability of total C4 protein levels in plasma of individuals with schizophrenia.

血浆补体C4在精神分裂症中的前景和陷阱:构建更好的生物标志物。
像精神分裂症这样的复杂大脑疾病可能有多因素的起源,与神经发育过程中不合时宜的遗传和环境因素相互作用有关。感染、炎症和自身免疫性疾病在精神分裂症中的代表性过高,导致了以免疫系统为中心的假设。补体成分C4在遗传和神经生物学上与精神分裂症有关,其在外周和大脑中的双重活性使其成为生物标志物开发的特殊靶点。评估精神分裂症患者血浆或血清C4生物标志物潜力的研究旨在了解外周C4如何反映中枢神经系统(CNS)衍生的神经炎症、突触修剪和其他机制。然而,这种努力产生了大多数相互矛盾的结果,在比较组之间,外周C4有时升高、降低或不变。我们进行了一项试点生物标志物开发研究,以系统地确定社会人口统计学、遗传和免疫相关变量(自身免疫、感染相关、胃肠道(GI)、炎症),这些变量可能与精神分裂症(SCH;n=335)和/或非精神病对照受试者(NCs;n=233)的血浆C4水平有关。与之前没有结论的研究一样,我们检测到SCH和NCs之间的血浆C4水平没有差异。相反,与NCs相比,SCH患者的一般炎症C反应蛋白(CRP)水平显著升高(ANOVA,F=20.74,p
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来源期刊
Developmental Neuroscience
Developmental Neuroscience 医学-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Developmental Neuroscience'' is a multidisciplinary journal publishing papers covering all stages of invertebrate, vertebrate and human brain development. Emphasis is placed on publishing fundamental as well as translational studies that contribute to our understanding of mechanisms of normal development as well as genetic and environmental causes of abnormal brain development. The journal thus provides valuable information for both physicians and biologists. To meet the rapidly expanding information needs of its readers, the journal combines original papers that report on progress and advances in developmental neuroscience with concise mini-reviews that provide a timely overview of key topics, new insights and ongoing controversies. The editorial standards of ''Developmental Neuroscience'' are high. We are committed to publishing only high quality, complete papers that make significant contributions to the field.
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