4.4 Article

Extended gene set analysis of human neuro-psychiatric traits shows enrichment in brain-expressed human accelerated regions across development

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SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
卷 246, 期 -, 页码 148-155

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2022.06.023

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Humanacceleratedregion; Geneenrichment; Schizophrenia; Intelligence; Brainexpression

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The genes associated with human brain evolution show significant interactions with whole-brain expression and are enriched in intelligence and schizophrenia-associated genes. This study provides insights for further research and drug development in neuropsychiatric disorders.
Human neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with genetic and environmental factors affecting the brain, which has been subjected to strong evolutionary pressures resulting in an enlarged cerebral cortex and improved cognitive performance. Thus, genes involved in human brain evolution may also play a role in neuropsychiatric disorders. We test whether genes associated with 7 neuropsychiatric phenotypes are enriched in genomic regions that have experienced rapid changes in human evolution (HARs) and importantly, whether HAR status interacts with developmental brain expression to predict associated genes. We used the most recent publicly available GWAS and gene expression data to test for enrichment of HARs, brain expression, and their interaction. These revealed significant interactions between HAR status and whole-brain expression across developmental stages, indicating that the relationship between brain expression and association with schizophrenia and intelligence is stronger among HAR than non-HAR genes. Follow-up regional analyses indicated that predicted HAR-expression interaction effects may vary substantially across regions and developmental stages. Although depression indi-cated significant enrichment of HAR genes, little support was found for HAR enrichment among bipolar, autism, ADHD, or Alzheimer's associated genes. Our results indicate that intelligence, schizophrenia, and depression-associated genes are enriched for those involved in the evolution of the human brain. These findings highlight promising candidates for follow-up study and considerations for novel drug development, but also caution careful assessment of the translational ability of animal models for studying neuropsychiatric traits in the context of HARs, and the importance of using humanized animal models or human-derived tissues when researching these traits.

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