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Limbic circuits and monoamine receptors:
dissecting the effects of antipsychotics from disease processes.
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There is considerable evidence for the involvement of brain dopaminergic
and serotonergic systems in schizophrenia pathology.

However, post-mortem studies have been limited by difficulties in
separating the effects of chronic exposure to antipsychotics from that of
the disease process.

Our recent studies directly explored this by comparing groups that were
free from antipsychotic treatment for up to a year prior to death and that
were maintained on antipsychotics.

We have used this approach to identify that there are prominent effects of
both disease and of antipsychotic treatment.

There appears to be a high association for schizophrenics between
elevations of D3 receptors in target regions of the mesolimbic dopamine
(DA) system and elevated numbers of 5-HT(1A) receptors in prefrontal cortex
(PFc).

Antipsychotic treatment was correlated with a reduction of D3 receptors in
the ventral striatum and its output structures.

It also led to a reduction in the number of 5-HT2 receptors in some regions
of the PFc without modifying the concentration of 5-HT(1A) receptors.

The limbic loop interconnecting the PFc and ventral striatum may be the
site of antipsychotic regulation of certain symptoms in schizophrenia,
particularly anhedonia and depression.

The positive symptoms of schizophrenia are more likely to be associated
with disturbances in the temporal lobe.

However, dopaminergic systems in the temporal lobe have historically been
thought to be underdeveloped compared to that in the basal ganglia and
unlikely to be the target of antipsychotics.

Our studies of the expression of the DA D2 receptor in the temporal lobe
has shown a complex organization in the perirhinal and temporal cortices
that is disrupted in schizophrenia.

The disturbances, which might be of neurodevelopmental origin and are
unrelated to antipsychotic treatment, include altered laminar distribution
of the D2 receptor and modified modular organization of D2 receptors in the
superior temporal gyrus.

We hypothesize that modified expression of D2 receptors in these regions
play a key role in the genesis of hallucinations.

Treatment with antipsychotics leading to D2 receptor blockade in temporal
cortex may reduce the presence of positive symptoms.


J Psychiatr Res 1997 Mar;31(2):197-217
Joyce JN, Goldsmith SG, Gurevich EV
Thomas H. Christopher Center for Parkinson's Disease Research, Sun Health
Research Institute, Sun City, AZ 85372, USA.
PMID: 9278186, MUID: 97422418
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