PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

NADPH-oxidase 4 gene over-expression in peripheral blood lymphocytes of the schizophrenia patients.

  • Elizaveta S Ershova,
  • Galina V Shmarina,
  • Andrey V Martynov,
  • Natalia V Zakharova,
  • Roman V Veiko,
  • Pavel E Umriukhin,
  • George P Kostyuk,
  • Sergey I Kutsev,
  • Natalia N Veiko,
  • Svetlana V Kostyuk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269130
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
p. e0269130

Abstract

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IntroductionIncreased systemic oxidative stress is common in schizophrenia (SZ) patients. NADPH-oxidase 4 (NOX4) is the cell oxidoreductase, catalyzing the hydrogen peroxide formation. Presumably, NOX4 is the main oxidative stress factor in a number of diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and cancer. We hypothesized that NOX4 may be involved in the oxidative stress development caused by the disease in the schizophrenic patients' peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL).Materials and methodsThe SZ group included 100 patients (68 men and 32 women aged 28 ± 11 years). The control group included 60 volunteers (35 men and 25 women aged 25 ± 12 years). Flow cytometry analysis (FCA) was used for DNA damage markers (8-oxodG, ɣH2AX), pro- and antiapoptotic proteins (BAX1 and BCL2) and the master-regulator of anti-oxidant response NRF2 detection in the lymphocytes of the untreated SZ patients (N = 100) and the healthy control (HC, N = 60). FCA and RT-qPCR were used for NOX4 and RNANOX4 detection in the lymphocytes. RT-qPCR was used for mtDNA quantitation in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Cell-free DNA concentration was determined in blood plasma fluorimetrically.Results8-oxodG, NOX4, and BCL2 levels in the PBL in the SZ group were higher than those in the HC group (p ConclusionSignificant NOX4 gene expression was found a in SZ patients' lymphocytes, but the corresponding protein is probably not a cause of the DNA damage.