4.7 Article

A chromosomal connectome for psychiatric and metabolic risk variants in adult dopaminergic neurons

Journal

GENOME MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13073-020-0715-x

Keywords

Spatial genome; chrom3D; Euclidean hot spots; Shared nuclear territories; BMI GWAS; Schizophrenia GWAS; Dopamine; Neurons; Obesity; Schizophrenia; Metabolic syndrome

Funding

  1. [R01MH106056]
  2. [U01 DA048279-01]
  3. [U01MH116442]
  4. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH [ZICMH002903] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Background Midbrain dopaminergic neurons (MDN) represent 0.0005% of the brain's neuronal population and mediate cognition, food intake, and metabolism. MDN are also posited to underlay the neurobiological dysfunction of schizophrenia (SCZ), a severe neuropsychiatric disorder that is characterized by psychosis as well as multifactorial medical co-morbidities, including metabolic disease, contributing to markedly increased morbidity and mortality. Paradoxically, however, the genetic risk sequences of psychosis and traits associated with metabolic disease, such as body mass, show very limited overlap. Methods We investigated the genomic interaction of SCZ with medical conditions and traits, including body mass index (BMI), by exploring the MDN's spatial genome, including chromosomal contact landscapes as a critical layer of cell type-specific epigenomic regulation. Low-input Hi-C protocols were applied to 5-10 x 10(3) dopaminergic and other cell-specific nuclei collected by fluorescence-activated nuclei sorting from the adult human midbrain. Results The Hi-C-reconstructed MDN spatial genome revealed 11 Euclidean hot spots of clustered chromatin domains harboring risk sequences for SCZ and elevated BMI. Inter- and intra-chromosomal contacts interconnecting SCZ and BMI risk sequences showed massive enrichment for brain-specific expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL), with gene ontologies, regulatory motifs and proteomic interactions related to adipogenesis and lipid regulation, dopaminergic neurogenesis and neuronal connectivity, and reward- and addiction-related pathways. Conclusions We uncovered shared nuclear topographies of cognitive and metabolic risk variants. More broadly, our PsychENCODE sponsored Hi-C study offers a novel genomic approach for the study of psychiatric and medical co-morbidities constrained by limited overlap of their respective genetic risk architectures on the linear genome.

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