Heritability of cerebral glutamate levels and their association with schizophrenia spectrum disorders: a 1 [H]-spectroscopy twin study

Publication date

2019-02-01

Authors

Legind, Christian Stefan
Broberg, Brian Villumsen
Mandl, René C WISNI 0000000388301774
Brouwer, Rachel MISNI 0000000389353779
Anhøj, Simon Jesper
Hilker, Rikke
Jensen, Maria Høj
McGuire, Philip
Pol, Hilleke E HulshoffORCID 0000-0002-2038-5281ISNI 000000035942330X
Fagerlund, Birgitte

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Research findings implicate cerebral glutamate in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia, including genetic studies reporting associations with glutamatergic neurotransmission. The extent to which aberrant glutamate levels can be explained by genetic factors is unknown, and if glutamate can serve as a marker of genetic susceptibility for schizophrenia remains to be established. We investigated the heritability of cerebral glutamate levels and whether a potential association with schizophrenia spectrum disorders could be explained by genetic factors. Twenty-three monozygotic (MZ) and 20 dizygotic (DZ) proband pairs con- or discordant for schizophrenia spectrum disorders, along with healthy control pairs (MZ = 28, DZ = 18) were recruited via the National Danish Twin Register and the Psychiatric Central Register (17 additional twins were scanned without their siblings). Glutamate levels in the left thalamus and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) were measured using 1[H]-magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 3 Tesla and analyzed by structural equation modeling. Glutamate levels in the left thalamus were heritable and positively correlated with liability for schizophrenia spectrum disorders (phenotypic correlation, 0.16, [0.02–0.29]; p = 0.010). The correlation was explained by common genes influencing both the levels of glutamate and liability for schizophrenia spectrum disorders. In the ACC, glutamate and glx levels were heritable, but not correlated to disease liability. Increases in thalamic glutamate levels found in schizophrenia spectrum disorders are explained by genetic influences related to the disease, and as such the measure could be a potential marker of genetic susceptibility, useful in early detection and stratification of patients with psychosis.

Keywords

Taverne, Pharmacology, Psychiatry and Mental health

Citation

Legind, C S, Broberg, B V, Mandl, R C W, Brouwer, R, Anhøj, S J, Hilker, R, Jensen, M H, McGuire, P, Pol, H H, Fagerlund, B, Rostrup, E & Glenthøj, B Y 2019, 'Heritability of cerebral glutamate levels and their association with schizophrenia spectrum disorders : a 1 [H]-spectroscopy twin study', Neuropsychopharmacology, vol. 44, no. 3, pp. 581-589. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-018-0236-0