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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Jun 18.
Published in final edited form as: Brain Res. 2010 Mar 18;1338:89–99. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2010.03.035

Table 1.

MicroRNAs associated with psychiatric disease

miRNA Validated target/Function Reference
16 miRs
dysregulated
Changed in DL-PFC from SCZ patients
(microarray)
(Perkins et al., 2007)
let-7g, miR-181b Changed in temporal gyrus from SCZ patients
(microarray)
(Beveridge et al., 2008)
59 misR
dysregulated
Changed in temporal gyrus from SCZ patients
(microarray)
(Beveridge et al., 2009)
26 miRs
dysregulated
Changed in DL-PFC from SCZ patients
(microarray)
(Beveridge et al., 2009)
miR-124, 383,
320, 596, 597,
598
Located within chromosome 8 QTL for SCZ,
autism
(Tabares-Seisdedos and Rubenstein, 2009)
5 X-linked miRs Private mutations in SCZ patients (Feng et al., 2009)
miR-346 Located in GRID2 intron, reduced in SCZ (Zhu et al., 2009)
miR-34a GRM7/reduced by both lithium and valproate
treatment
(Zhou et al., 2009)
miR-221, 152,
152, 494
Changed in BPD lymphocytes after lithium
treatment
(Chen et al., 2009)
miR-199a, 128a/b Upregulated by haloperidol treatment in rats (Perkins et al., 2007)
miR-195, miR-30a BDNF regulation (Mellios et al., 2008)
miR-96 HTR1B/aggressive behavior in humans (Jensen et al.,
2009)
miR-219 CAMK2G/reduced by MK-801 treatment in mice (Kocerha et al., 2009)