Mecanismos que controlan los genes con respuesta clínica a los antipsicóticospapel de la señalización receptor D1-cAMP-CREB en la regulación de ADAMTS2

  1. Ruso Julve, Fulgencio
Supervised by:
  1. Benedicto Crespo Facorro Director
  2. José Pedro Vaqué Díez Co-director

Defence university: Universidad de Cantabria

Fecha de defensa: 13 December 2019

Committee:
  1. Tomás Palomo Alvarez Chair
  2. María Amor Hurlé González Secretary
  3. Julio Sanjuán Arias Committee member

Type: Thesis

Teseo: 609937 DIALNET lock_openUCrea editor

Abstract

A better understanding of the molecular mechanisms that participate in the development and clinical manifestations of schizophrenia can lead to improve our ability to diagnose and treat this disease. Previous data strongly associated the levels of deregulated ADAMTS2 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from patients at first episode of psychosis (up) as well as in clinical responders to treatment with antipsychotic drugs (down). In this current work, we performed an independent validation of such data and studied the mechanisms implicated in the control of ADAMTS2 gene expression. Using a new cohort of drug-naïve schizophrenia patients with clinical follow-up, we confirmed that the expression of ADAMTS2 was highly upregulated in PBMCs at the onset (drug-naïve patients) and downregulated, in clinical responders, after treatment with antipsychotics. Mechanistically, ADAMTS2 expression was activated by dopaminergic signalling (D1-class receptors) and downstream by cAMP/CREB and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/ERK signalling. Incubation with antipsychotic drugs and selective PKA and MEK inhibitors abrogated D1-mediated activation of ADAMTS2 in neuronal-like cells. Thus, D1 receptors signalling towards CREB activation might participate in the onset and clinical responses to therapy in schizophrenia patients, by controlling ADAMTS2 expression and activity. The unbiased investigation of molecular mechanisms triggered by antipsychotic drugs may provide a new landscape of novel targets potentially associated with clinical efficacy.