Xiao Yu, Jiacheng Du, Chenger Zhou, Yongheng Huang, Huijuan Li, Bruce M Cohen, Sangmi Chung, Zhicheng Shao
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Dysregulation of the BRD2-FGF17 Signal Pathway Induces Abnormal Forebrain Development Associated with Schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a severe and hereditary neurodevelopmental disorder with unknown etiology. Here, we found that the SCZ risk gene BRD2, as an epigenetic reader, is consistently expressed in developing mouse and human cortical astrocytes. Astrocyte-specific Brd2 knockout in mice leads to dysregulation of immune responses and reduces Fgf17 expression, resulting in SCZ-like behaviors, including impaired sensorimotor gating, memory, and cognitive deficits. Moreover, BRD2 inhibition using JQ1 in forebrain organoids leads to FGF17 reduction, inducing developmental deficits involved in neural patterning and gliogenesis. The decrease of FGF17 expression was also found in SCZ patient-derived forebrain organoids, similar to BRD2-inhibited forebrain organoids. FGF17 treatment partially rescued the disrupted gene expression in BRD2-inhibited human forebrain organoids. Taken together, these findings suggest that disrupting the BRD2-FGF17 signaling pathway in early brain development may contribute to the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and may represent a potential therapeutic target for SCZ.
期刊介绍:
Neuroscience Bulletin (NB), the official journal of the Chinese Neuroscience Society, is published monthly by Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences (SIBS), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and Springer.
NB aims to publish research advances in the field of neuroscience and promote exchange of scientific ideas within the community. The journal publishes original papers on various topics in neuroscience and focuses on potential disease implications on the nervous system. NB welcomes research contributions on molecular, cellular, or developmental neuroscience using multidisciplinary approaches and functional strategies. We feature full-length original articles, reviews, methods, letters to the editor, insights, and research highlights. As the official journal of the Chinese Neuroscience Society, which currently has more than 12,000 members in China, NB is devoted to facilitating communications between Chinese neuroscientists and their international colleagues. The journal is recognized as the most influential publication in neuroscience research in China.