Abstract

Glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3β is a conserved serine/threonine protein kinase highly abundant in brain tissue. A dominant mechanism by which cells react to stress involves GSK-3β. We studied the effect of stress on GSK-3β levels ex vivo. We have previously found reduced GSK-3β protein levels and GSK-3 activity in postmortem prefrontal cortex of schizophrenic patients. Since schizophrenic patients experience stress more severely than healthy people, we questioned whether their GSK-3β reduction is stress-related using a rat model. Rats were exposed to acute, subchronic, or chronic stress using brief cold restraint. No effect was found on frontal cortex GSK-3β protein levels. These results suggest that reduction in GSK-3β levels in schizophrenic patients is not affected by cold restraint stress and supports the possibility that the changes observed in postmortem brains may be related to the disease.

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