Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5736415 | Brain Research Bulletin | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Levodopa, or Chlorpromazine can induce depression-like phenotypes in D. melanogaster regarding changes of appetite and sexual activity, and some key biochemical markers. A total of 467 genes were identified by RNA-seq analysis to have at least a 2-fold-change in expression between CPZ and control flies, including genes involved in metabolism, neurological diseases and lysozyme pathways. Our data provide additional insight into molecular mechanisms underlying depressive disorders in humans and may also contribute to clinical treatment.
Keywords
MDDMDAquantitative reverse transcriptase PCRFXSCPZDEGs5-HTqRT-PCRRNA-seqMajor depressive disorderDepressioninterleukinconMolecular functioncellular componentSODSerotoninfragile X syndromeSuperoxide dismutasebiological processmalondialdehydeDrosophila melanogasterGene ontologyDifferentially expressed geneschlorpromazine
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Authors
Ming-Di Jiang, Ya Zheng, Jia-Lin Wang, Yu-Feng Wang,