Monday, May 20, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Excess of a protein may trigger schizophrenia

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Nov, 2014 11:21 AM
  • Excess of a protein may trigger schizophrenia
Overabundance of a protein in the brain cells during brain development may cause abnormalities in its structure and lead to schizophrenia, says a study.
 
Too much of the NOS1AP protein resulted in the dendrites - tree-like structures that allow cells to talk to each other and are essential to the functioning of the nervous system - being stunted in the developing brains of rats, the researchers found.
 
"When the brain develops, it sets up a system of the right type of connectivity to make sure that communication can occur," said Bonnie Firestein from the Rutgers University in the US.
 
"What we saw here was that the nerve cells did not move to the correct locations and did not have dendrites that branch out to make the connections that were needed," Firestein added.
 
The researchers found that too much of the NOS1AP protein in brain cells did not allow them to branch out and kept them deep within the neo-cortex, the portion of the brain responsible for higher functioning skills, such as spatial reasoning, conscious thought, motor commands, language development and sensory perception.
 
In the control group of rats in which the NOS1AP protein was not over-expressed, the cellular connections developed properly, with cells moving out to the outer layers of the neocortex and enabling the nerve cells to communicate.
 
Although scientists cannot pinpoint for certain the exact cause of schizophrenia, they have determined that several genes, including NOS1AP, are associated with an increased risk for the disabling brain disorder.
 
The study appeared in the journal Biological Psychiatry.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Seven seeds with health benefits

Seven seeds with health benefits
From pomegranate, hemp to chia, every seed has something different to provide to the body. But which ones deliver health and body benefits is something....

Seven seeds with health benefits

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia
For people in the early phases of recovery from alcohol addiction, insomnia is a "prevalent and persistent" problem, says a study....

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing
Danish researchers have found that signs of brain ageing, which manifests itself in forms such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, could be...

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality
Women born with a rare condition that gives them a Y chromosome do not only look like women physically, they also have the same brain responses...

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors
Practising meditation has a positive physical impact at the cellular level in breast cancer survivors, new research shows....

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

Long term shift work hampers memory

Long term shift work hampers memory
Long term shift work can help you earn more but it could adversely affect your brain functions, such as memory and processing speed, says a research....

Long term shift work hampers memory