Copyright
©The Author(s) 2018.
World J Psychiatr. Jun 28, 2018; 8(2): 51-63
Published online Jun 28, 2018. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v8.i2.51
Published online Jun 28, 2018. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v8.i2.51
EAAT1 | Genetic studies | |
BD | SNP rs2731880 T/T genotype associated with worse working memory and selective attention during a depressive episode[102] | |
SNP rs2731880 T/T genotype increased negative fMRI BOLD coupling between the amygdala and AnCg[103] | ||
Scz | SNP rs2731880 T/T genotype associated with worse executive function, verbal fluency and verbal memory[104] | |
No association between EAAT1 SNPs rs1428973, rs2033267, rs426040, rs4869684, rs1544795, rs3776585, rs962686, rs2303716, rs3776586, rs1049524, rs1529461 and Scz[112] | ||
mRNA studies | ||
MDD | ↓Lower levels in the DLPFC[83], AnCg[83], locus coeruleus[105] and hippocampus[106] | |
↑Higher cortical levels in suicide completers with a MDD diagnosis compared to those without a diagnosis[118] | ||
Scz | ↑Higher mRNA in the cerebellar vermis[113], AnCg[114], thalamus[115] and prefrontal cortex[116] | |
→No change in the DLPFC or primary visual cortex[76,114] | ||
↓Lower levels in the prefrontal cortex of subjects who completed suicide compared to those who did not[117] | ||
Medication use | ↑Haloperidol has been associated with an increase in EAAT1 mRNA in the thalamic medial dorsal nucleus[121] | |
↑Chronic sodium valproate resulted in an upregulation of EAAT1 mRNA in chick cerebellar BGC culture[110] | ||
Protein studies | ||
Scz | ↓Decreased in the prefrontal cortex[114] | |
↓N-glycosylation of EAAT1 monomer was decreased in the AnCg[114,119] | ||
PTSD | ↓Hippocampal EAAT1 protein was lower in a single prolonged stress (SPS) rat model of PTSD[108] | |
Medication use | →Clozapine did not affect EAAT1 protein levels in rat[113,122] | |
↑Chronic sodium valproate resulted in an upregulation of EAAT1 protein in rat hippocampus and chick cerebellar BGC culture[109,110] | ||
EAAT2 | Genetic studies | |
Scz | SNP rs4354668 G/G associated with poorer working memory performance[104,138] and a reduction in frontal grey matter[139] | |
mRNA studies | ||
MDD | ↓Lower levels in DLPFC and AnCg[83] | |
↑Higher levels in subjects who had completed suicide without a diagnosis of MDD compared to those with a diagnosis[118,127] | ||
↓Lower levels in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex and striatum of a rat model of depression[128,129] | ||
Scz | ↓Lower levels in the parahippocampal gyrus[140] and prefrontal cortex[141] | |
↑Higher levels in the thalamus[115] and prefrontal cortex[142] | ||
→No change in EAAT2 or EAAT2b mRNA in the DLPFC or primary visual cortex[76] | ||
Medication use | ↓Clozapine decreased levels in hippocampal CA1, parietal temporal, frontal and cingulate cortical[144], and striatal[145] brain regions of male Sprague-Dawley rats | |
↓Haloperidol decreased frontal and cingulate cortical[144], as well as striatal[145], EAAT2 expression in rat | ||
↓Levels were higher in untreated subjects with Scz than in those prescribed typical or atypical antipsychotics[142] | ||
↓Increased levels caused by chronic stress were normalised by tianeptine treatment in rat[130] | ||
↓Increased hippocampal levels caused by stress were normalised by lithium administration in rat[137] | ||
↑Fluoxetine increased rat hippocampal and cortical levels[136] | ||
↑Tranylcypromine increased levels in rat amygdala[136] | ||
Protein studies | ||
Scz | ↓ N-glycosylation of EAAT2 multimer was lower in the DLPFC[119] | |
↑ EAAT2b increased in extrasynaptic membrane/cytosol fractions from the DLPFC[143] | ||
PTSD | ↓Hippocampal EAAT2 protein was lower in the single prolonged stress (SPS) rat model of PTSD[108] | |
Medication use | ↓Clozapine decreased protein levels in astrocyte culture[147] | |
↓Clozapine reduced protein levels in the cerebral cortex of adult rats[146] | ||
↓Increased levels caused by chronic stress were normalised by tianeptine treatment in rat[130] | ||
→Increases in EAAT2b protein caused by chronic stress were unaffected by tianeptine treatment in rat[130] | ||
↑Chronic sodium valproate increased hippocampal EAAT2 protein in rat[109] |
- Citation: Parkin GM, Udawela M, Gibbons A, Dean B. Glutamate transporters, EAAT1 and EAAT2, are potentially important in the pathophysiology and treatment of schizophrenia and affective disorders. World J Psychiatr 2018; 8(2): 51-63
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3206/full/v8/i2/51.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v8.i2.51