4.8 Article

Drug discovery for psychiatric disorders using high-content single-cell screening of signaling network responses ex vivo

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SCIENCE ADVANCES
卷 5, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aau9093

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资金

  1. Stanley Medical Research Institute (SMRI)
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council UK (EPSRC CASE studentship)
  3. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council UK (Impact Acceleration Award)
  4. EPSRC CASE studentship
  5. European Union FP7 funding scheme: Marie Curie Actions Industry Academia Partnerships and Pathways [286334]
  6. Virgo consortium - Dutch Government [FES0908]
  7. Netherlands Genomics Initiative [050-060-452]
  8. Dutch Fund for Economic Structure Reinforcement
  9. NeuroBasic PharmaPhenomics project [0908]
  10. SMRI [R03MH08744, R01MH095088]

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There is a paucity of efficacious new compounds to treat neuropsychiatric disorders. We present a novel approach to neuropsychiatric drug discovery based on high-content characterization of druggable signaling network responses at the single-cell level in patient-derived lymphocytes ex vivo. Primary T lymphocytes showed functional responses encompassing neuropsychiatric medications and central nervous system ligands at established (e.g., GSK-3 beta) and emerging (e.g., CrkL) drug targets. Clinical application of the platform to schizophrenia patients over the course of antipsychotic treatment revealed therapeutic targets within the phospholipase C gamma 1-calcium signaling pathway. Compound library screening against the target phenotype identified subsets of L-type calcium channel blockers and corticosteroids as novel therapeutically relevant drug classes with corresponding activity in neuronal cells. The screening results were validated by predicting in vivo efficacy in an independent schizophrenia cohort. The approach has the potential to discern new drug targets and accelerate drug discovery and personalized medicine for neuropsychiatric conditions.

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