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Excess hydrogen sulfide and polysulfides production underlies a schizophrenia pathophysiology

Authors :
Masayuki Ide
Tetsuo Ohnishi
Manabu Toyoshima
Shabeesh Balan
Motoko Maekawa
Chie Shimamoto‐Mitsuyama
Yoshimi Iwayama
Hisako Ohba
Akiko Watanabe
Takashi Ishii
Norihiro Shibuya
Yuka Kimura
Yasuko Hisano
Yui Murata
Tomonori Hara
Momo Morikawa
Kenji Hashimoto
Yayoi Nozaki
Tomoko Toyota
Yuina Wada
Yosuke Tanaka
Tadafumi Kato
Akinori Nishi
Shigeyoshi Fujisawa
Hideyuki Okano
Masanari Itokawa
Nobutaka Hirokawa
Yasuto Kunii
Akiyoshi Kakita
Hirooki Yabe
Kazuya Iwamoto
Kohji Meno
Takuya Katagiri
Brian Dean
Kazuhiko Uchida
Hideo Kimura
Takeo Yoshikawa
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 11, Iss 12, Pp 1-24 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Mice with the C3H background show greater behavioral propensity for schizophrenia, including lower prepulse inhibition (PPI), than C57BL/6 (B6) mice. To characterize as‐yet‐unknown pathophysiologies of schizophrenia, we undertook proteomics analysis of the brain in these strains, and detected elevated levels of Mpst, a hydrogen sulfide (H2S)/polysulfide‐producing enzyme, and greater sulfide deposition in C3H than B6 mice. Mpst‐deficient mice exhibited improved PPI with reduced storage sulfide levels, while Mpst‐transgenic (Tg) mice showed deteriorated PPI, suggesting that “sulfide stress” may be linked to PPI impairment. Analysis of human samples demonstrated that the H2S/polysulfides production system is upregulated in schizophrenia. Mechanistically, the Mpst‐Tg brain revealed dampened energy metabolism, while maternal immune activation model mice showed upregulation of genes for H2S/polysulfides production along with typical antioxidative genes, partly via epigenetic modifications. These results suggest that inflammatory/oxidative insults in early brain development result in upregulated H2S/polysulfides production as an antioxidative response, which in turn cause deficits in bioenergetic processes. Collectively, this study presents a novel aspect of the neurodevelopmental theory for schizophrenia, unraveling a role of excess H2S/polysulfides production.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17574676 and 17574684
Volume :
11
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7d421ed9c97e4545be1c2101a84acaa4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201910695