Racial Differences in S100b Levels in Persons with Schizophrenia

The calcium-binding protein S100b is secreted by glial cells in the brain and is also expressed by melanocytes. In nanomolar concentrations, S100b is considered to be a neurotrophic factor, but in micromolar concentrations, it is thought to reflect CNS injury and inflammation. Seen as a potential bi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatric quarterly 2020-03, Vol.91 (1), p.137-145
Hauptverfasser: Gannon, Jessica M., Kelly, Deanna L., Besch, Abigail, Thakur, Tanu, Khurana, Neil, Shurin, Michael R., Shurin, Galina V., Brar, Jaspreet S., Cihakova, Daniela, Talor, Monica V., Chengappa, K. N. Roy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The calcium-binding protein S100b is secreted by glial cells in the brain and is also expressed by melanocytes. In nanomolar concentrations, S100b is considered to be a neurotrophic factor, but in micromolar concentrations, it is thought to reflect CNS injury and inflammation. Seen as a potential biomarker in traumatic brain injury, meta-analytic data from several studies report that S100b levels are significantly higher in persons with long standing schizophrenia, but also among first-episode patients compared to healthy control subjects. However, ethnic or racial differences are typically not mentioned when reporting levels of S100b. We assessed serum S100b levels in persons with schizophrenia ( n  = 136) who were participants in two independent research studies using the same enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA). African-American subjects had significantly higher levels of S100b (41.9 pg/ml ± 62.2) than Caucasian subjects (24.9 pg/ml ± 45.4) in the combined dataset (Mann-Whitney U = 1307, p  
ISSN:0033-2720
1573-6709
DOI:10.1007/s11126-019-09687-4