DISC1

Recent articles

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Molecular mechanisms: FOXP2 leads to new autism gene

FOXP2, a language gene that is linked to autism, may regulate active connections between neurons by controlling the levels of a protein called SRPX2, according to a study published 22 November in Science.

By Jessica Wright
24 January 2014 | 2 min read
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Genetics: Brain development pathway linked to autism

Individuals with autism may carry genetic variants in a pathway important for brain development, according to a study published in September in Translational Psychiatry.

By Virginia Hughes
26 November 2013 | 3 min read
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Molecular mechanisms: Maternal infection modifies histones

Infection during pregnancy may alter the chemical tags that are added to histones, proteins that form a spool for DNA, according to a study published 9 February in Brain, Behavior and Immunity. Drugs that target these tags may treat neuropsychiatric disorders, the researchers say.

By Jessica Wright
7 May 2013 | 2 min read
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Fluorescent fish help track mitochondrial motion

Fish engineered to express fluorescent proteins allow researchers to follow the paths of migrating mitochondria, the cell’s energy producers, according to a study published 14 November in The Journal of Neuroscience.

By Jessica Wright
16 January 2013 | 2 min read
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Molecular mechanisms: Autism genes regulate cell sensors

Genes involved in neuropsychiatric disorders tend to be required for the formation of primary cilia — small tentacles on the cell surface that sense the external environment — according to a study published 3 October in PLoS One.

By Jessica Wright
18 December 2012 | 2 min read
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Stem cells reveal genes that have parental bias

Researchers have used stem cells to identify 801 neuronal genes that are preferentially expressed from either the maternal or paternal chromosome, according to a study published 30 August in PLoS One. Of these genes, 26 are linked to autism and 48 to schizophrenia. 

By Jessica Wright
31 October 2012 | 2 min read
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Genetics: Language gene may regulate autism, schizophrenia

FOXP2, a protein linked to language development that regulates the expression of some autism-associated genes, also dampens expression of DISC1, mutations in which have been linked to both schizophrenia and autism. The results were published 20 March in Human Molecular Genetics.

By Jessica Wright
11 April 2012 | 3 min read
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Molecular mechanisms: Autism gene modulates connectivity

Neurons lacking PTEN, an autism-associated gene also involved in cancer, are hyperconnected to both near and distant brain cells, according to a study published 1 February in The Journal of Neuroscience.

By Jessica Wright
10 April 2012 | 3 min read
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Molecular mechanisms: Autism protein forms aggregates

DISC1, an autism-associated protein, can form large aggregates that deplete the amount of functional DISC1 in cells, according to a study published 14 February in Human Molecular Genetics.

By Jessica Wright
13 March 2012 | 3 min read
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Genetics: Autism, Tourette syndrome genes overlap

Genes implicated in Tourette syndrome overlap with those involved in autism, according to an analysis of rare DNA duplications and deletions in people with the syndrome, published in the March issue of Biological Psychiatry.

By Jessica Wright
15 February 2012 | 3 min read

Explore more from The Transmitter

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‘Friction-maxxing’ in school: Students should read primary literature, not AI summaries

Trainees need to learn how to identify a neuroscience paper’s major takeaways and integrate them into their understanding. This skill doesn’t come from outsourcing the work to large language models.

By Nora Bradford
26 March 2026 | 5 min read

Head direction cells stably orient mice to outside world

The cells’ representations show little drift over time—unlike those of other navigation system neurons—and may provide a “rigid backbone” for more flexible sensory and cognitive responses.

By Angie Voyles Askham
25 March 2026 | 0 min watch
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Juan Gallego discusses how manifolds are transforming our understanding of the coordination of neuronal population activity

A wealth of evidence supports the view that neural manifolds are real and useful, Gallego says, even if they may not completely solve the age-old mind-body problem.

By Paul Middlebrooks
25 March 2026 | 121 min listen