Abstract
Hemizygous cryptic deletions of the q11 band of human chromosome 22 have been associated with a number of psychiatric and behavioural phenotypes, including schizophrenia1,2,3. Here we report the isolation and characterization of PRODH, a human homologue of Drosophila melanogaster sluggish-A (slgA), which encodes proline dehydrogenase responsible for the behavioural phenotype of the slgA mutant4. PRODH is localized at chromosome 22q11 in a region deleted in some psychiatric patients. We also isolated the mouse homologue of slgA (Prodh), identified a mutation in this gene in the Pro/Re hyperprolinaemic mouse strain and found that these mice have a deficit in sensorimotor gating accompanied by regional neurochemical alterations in the brain. Sensorimotor gating is a neural filtering process that allows attention to be focused on a given stimulus, and is affected in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders5. Furthermore, several lines of evidence suggest that proline may serve as a modulator of synaptic transmission in the mammalian brain. Our observations, in conjunction with the chromosomal location of PRODH, suggest a potential involvement of this gene in the 22q11-associated psychiatric and behavioural phenotypes.
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Acknowledgements
We thank B.L. Galke, Y. Jiao and L. Malinova for technical assistance; C. Baptista and A. Matilla for help in the initial phases of this work; M. Morgan and D. Pfaff for help with setting up the behavioural assays; M. McGee-Harper for help with the statistical analysis; and D. Pfaff for useful comments on the manuscript. Support for this work was provided by a grant from the Patterson Trust and the Irma T. Hirschl Foundation to M.K.
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Gogos, J., Santha, M., Takacs, Z. et al. The gene encoding proline dehydrogenase modulates sensorimotor gating in mice. Nat Genet 21, 434–439 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/7777
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/7777
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