Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental disorder with the typical age of onset of overt symptoms and deficits occurring during late adolescence or early adulthood, coinciding with the final maturation of the cortical network involving the prefrontal cortex. These observations have led to the hypothesis that disturbances of the developmental events that take place in the prefrontal cortex during this period, specifically the remodeling of synaptic connectivities between pyramidal neurons, may contribute to the onset of illness. In this context, we investigated the gene expression changes of pyramidal neurons in the human prefrontal cortex during normal periadolescent development in order to gain insight into the possible molecular mechanisms involved in synaptic remodeling of pyramidal neuronal circuitry. Our data suggest that genes associated with the ubiquitination system, which has been implicated in the biology of synaptic plasticity, may play a major role. Among these genes, UBE3B, which encodes the ubiquitin ligase E3, was found to undergo periadolescent increase and was validated at the protein level to be upregulated during periadolescent development. Furthermore, we found that the density of UBE3B-immunoreactive pyramidal neurons was decreased in schizophrenia subjects, consistent with the result of a previous study of decreased UBE3B mRNA expression in pyramidal neurons in this illness. Altogether these findings point to the novel hypothesis that this specific ligase may play a role in the developmental pathogenesis of schizophrenia onset by possibly altering the synaptic remodeling process.
Keywords: Adolescence; Prefrontal cortex; Schizophrenia; Synaptic pruning; Ubiquitin ligase.
Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.