There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Certain clinical features of schizophrenia, such as working memory disturbances, appear
to emerge from altered gamma oscillatory activity in the prefrontal cortex (PFC).
Given the essential role of GABA neurotransmission in both working memory and gamma
oscillations, understanding the cellular substrate for their disturbances in schizophrenia
requires evidence from in vivo neuroimaging studies, which provide a means to link
markers of GABA neurotransmission to gamma oscillations and working memory, and from
postmortem studies, which provide insight into GABA neurotransmission at molecular
and cellular levels of resolution. Here, we review findings from both types of studies
which converge on the notions that 1) inhibitory GABA signaling in the PFC, especially
between parvalbumin positive GABAergic basket cells and excitatory pyramidal cells,
is required for gamma oscillatory activity and working memory function; and 2) disturbances
in this signaling contribute to altered gamma oscillations and working memory in schizophrenia.
Because the PFC is only one node in a distributed cortical network that mediates working
memory, we also review evidence of GABA abnormalities in other cortical regions in
schizophrenia.