Abstract

BackgroundThe choroid plexus (CP) produces and secretes most of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of the central nervous system. The CP is suggested to be regulated by descending neurons and by circulating factors and is involved in the interaction between central and peripheral inflammation. Quantitative imaging has demonstrated volumetric CP changes in psychosis, schizophrenia and depression. This study histologically examines CP epithelial cell morphology in these illnesses to identify the biological source of such volumetric changes. MethodsFormalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks were obtained bilaterally from the lateral ventricles of 13 cases of sex- and age-matched brains from each of schizophrenia (SZ) with psychosis, major depressive disorder (MDD) and matched controls (NPD). FFPE blocks were sectioned at 7 μm and routinely stained for H&E. Morphological analysis of 180 CP epithelia/case was conducted blindly on digital images collected at x600 magnification. Calcification was assessed in all CP regions manually. ResultsAnalysis with a General Linear Model demonstrated a significant effect of diagnosis on somal width (p = 0.006, R2 = 0.33 R2(adj) = 0.25) demonstrating increased somal width in SZ without psychotic medication versus controls (p = 0.032), but not in medicated SZ cases. No effects were observed in calcification. DiscussionThe epithelial cells that were examined were attached to the CP fibrous surface, so width expansion describes the primary methods for these cells to expand with adherence to this surface in SZ. The interaction of antipsychotic medication and diagnosis demonstrates that this is an illness-specific change mediated through the DA-system with likely neuronal origin. CP alterations were not found in MDD where they are instead generally associated with heightened allostatic load that was unknown in this cohort.

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