A comprehensive understanding of mGluR5 regulation in major depression, particularly in comparison to schizophrenia, is crucial as this has extensive implications for mGluR5 targeting novel therapeutics, especially considering that opposing modulation of mGluR5 is of therapeutic interest for these two disorders.
As a result, we identified one gene set with a joint effect significantly associated with schizophrenia and gene expression profiling analysis suggested that they were mainly neuro- and immune-related genes, such as glutamatergic gene (GRM5), GABAergic genes (GABRB1, GABARAP) and genes located in the MHC region (HLA-C, TAP2, HIST1H1B).
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first evidence showing that the promoter methylation of the GMR2 and GMR5 genes greatly decreased the risk of schizophrenia, and the expression level of the GRM2, GRM5, and GRIA3 genes increased significantly in patients in comparison to healthy controls.