Journal article

Effects of Psychotropic Drugs on Ribosomal Genes and Protein Synthesis

ZSJ Liu, TTT Truong, CC Bortolasci, B Spolding, B Panizzutti, C Swinton, JH Kim, S Kidnapillai, MF Richardson, L Gray, OM Dean, SL McGee, M Berk, K Walder

International Journal of Molecular Sciences | Published : 2022

Abstract

Altered protein synthesis has been implicated in the pathophysiology of several neuropsychiatric disorders, particularly schizophrenia. Ribosomes are the machinery responsible for protein synthesis. However, there remains little information on whether current psychotropic drugs affect ribosomes and contribute to their therapeutic effects. We treated human neuronal-like (NT2-N) cells with amisulpride (10 µM), aripiprazole (0.1 µM), clozapine (10 µM), lamotrigine (50 µM), lithium (2.5 mM), quetiapine (50 µM), risperidone (0.1 µM), valproate (0.5 mM) or vehicle control for 24 h. Transcriptomic and gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) identified that the ribosomal pathway was altered by these dru..

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University of Melbourne Researchers