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e-Article

Dysregulated protocadherin-pathway activity as an intrinsic defect in induced pluripotent stem cell–derived cortical interneurons from subjects with schizophrenia
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Neuroscience. 22(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Psychology
Neurosciences
Psychology
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Stem Cell Research
Brain Disorders
Regenerative Medicine
Mental Health
Schizophrenia
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Mental health
Neurological
Animals
Cadherins
Female
Humans
Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
Interneurons
Male
Mice
Mice
Knockout
Prefrontal Cortex
Protocadherins
Signal Transduction
Synapses
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
We generated cortical interneurons (cINs) from induced pluripotent stem cells derived from 14 healthy controls and 14 subjects with schizophrenia. Both healthy control cINs and schizophrenia cINs were authentic, fired spontaneously, received functional excitatory inputs from host neurons, and induced GABA-mediated inhibition in host neurons in vivo. However, schizophrenia cINs had dysregulated expression of protocadherin genes, which lie within documented schizophrenia loci. Mice lacking protocadherin-α showed defective arborization and synaptic density of prefrontal cortex cINs and behavioral abnormalities. Schizophrenia cINs similarly showed defects in synaptic density and arborization that were reversed by inhibitors of protein kinase C, a downstream kinase in the protocadherin pathway. These findings reveal an intrinsic abnormality in schizophrenia cINs in the absence of any circuit-driven pathology. They also demonstrate the utility of homogenous and functional populations of a relevant neuronal subtype for probing pathogenesis mechanisms during development.