| Literature DB >> 30279459 |
Dennis van der Meer1, Jaroslav Rokicki2,3, Tobias Kaufmann2, Aldo Córdova-Palomera2,4, Torgeir Moberget2, Dag Alnæs2, Francesco Bettella2, Oleksandr Frei2, Nhat Trung Doan2, Ida E Sønderby2, Olav B Smeland2, Ingrid Agartz2, Alessandro Bertolino5,6, Janita Bralten7,8, Christine L Brandt2, Jan K Buitelaar8, Srdjan Djurovic9,10, Marjolein van Donkelaar7,8, Erlend S Dørum2,3,11, Thomas Espeseth2,3, Stephen V Faraone12, Guillén Fernández8, Simon E Fisher8,13, Barbara Franke7,8, Beathe Haatveit2,3, Catharina A Hartman14, Pieter J Hoekstra15, Asta K Håberg16,17, Erik G Jönsson2,18, Knut K Kolskår2,3,11, Stephanie Le Hellard10,19, Martina J Lund2, Astri J Lundervold20, Arvid Lundervold21, Ingrid Melle2, Jennifer Monereo Sánchez2, Linn C Norbom2,3, Jan E Nordvik11, Lars Nyberg22, Jaap Oosterlaan23, Marco Papalino5, Andreas Papassotiropoulos24,25,26, Giulio Pergola5, Dominique J F de Quervain27, Geneviève Richard2,3,11, Anne-Marthe Sanders2,3,11, Pierluigi Selvaggi5,28, Elena Shumskaya7,8, Vidar M Steen10,19, Siren Tønnesen2, Kristine M Ulrichsen2,3,11, Marcel P Zwiers8, Ole A Andreassen2, Lars T Westlye2,3.
Abstract
The hippocampus is a heterogeneous structure, comprising histologically distinguishable subfields. These subfields are differentially involved in memory consolidation, spatial navigation and pattern separation, complex functions often impaired in individuals with brain disorders characterized by reduced hippocampal volume, including Alzheimer's disease (AD) and schizophrenia. Given the structural and functional heterogeneity of the hippocampal formation, we sought to characterize the subfields' genetic architecture. T1-weighted brain scans (n = 21,297, 16 cohorts) were processed with the hippocampal subfields algorithm in FreeSurfer v6.0. We ran a genome-wide association analysis on each subfield, co-varying for whole hippocampal volume. We further calculated the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability of 12 subfields, as well as their genetic correlation with each other, with other structural brain features and with AD and schizophrenia. All outcome measures were corrected for age, sex and intracranial volume. We found 15 unique genome-wide significant loci across six subfields, of which eight had not been previously linked to the hippocampus. Top SNPs were mapped to genes associated with neuronal differentiation, locomotor behaviour, schizophrenia and AD. The volumes of all the subfields were estimated to be heritable (h2 from 0.14 to 0.27, all p < 1 × 10-16) and clustered together based on their genetic correlations compared with other structural brain features. There was also evidence of genetic overlap of subicular subfield volumes with schizophrenia. We conclude that hippocampal subfields have partly distinct genetic determinants associated with specific biological processes and traits. Taking into account this specificity may increase our understanding of hippocampal neurobiology and associated pathologies.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30279459 PMCID: PMC6445783 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-018-0262-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992
Fig. 1Correlation matrix of the volume estimates for the subfields as well as several other cortical and subcortical regions of interest and cerebral lobes. All correlations are multiplied by a factor 100. The volumetric correlations are shown in the lower triangle of the matrix (green–orange), the heritability estimates on the diagonal, and the genetic correlations in the upper triangle (blue–red). The order, indicated by the dendrogram on top, is determined by hierarchical clustering using Ward’s D2 method
Whole-genome significant loci for whole hippocampal volume as well as for the subfields while co-varying for whole hippocampal volume
| Structure | Unique locus | Lead SNP | A1 | Chr | Position (BP) | Beta† | P-value | Mapped gene(s) | GWAS catalogue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole hippocampus | 1 | rs1861979 | T | 2 | 162845565 | 39.54 | 4.64e − 13 | [ | |
| 2 | rs7630893 | C | 3 | 141759380 | 36.18 | 2.55e − 09 | [ | ||
| 3 | rs57246240 | A | 5 | 66112715 | 36.63 | 9.00e − 11 | [ | ||
| 4 | rs7873551 | C | 9 | 119245127 | -42.42 | 3.51e − 11 | [ | ||
| 5 | rs12218858 | C | 10 | 126474200 | 43.75 | 1.06e − 15 | [ | ||
| 6 | rs1419859 | T | 12 | 4007898 | − 35.60 | 1.01e − 09 | - | ||
| 7 | rs17178139 | A | 12 | 65765944 | − 58.08 | 1.58e − 20 | [ | ||
| 8 | rs77956314 | C | 12 | 117323367 | 123.31 | 2.19e − 35 | [ | ||
| Presubiculum | 7 | rs17178006 | G | 12 | 65718299 | 5.61 | 1.83e − 15 | [ | |
| Subiculum | 9 | rs9399619 | G | 6 | 148056480 | 2.31 | 5.87e − 09 | - | |
| CA1 | 7 | rs17178006 | G | 12 | 65718299 | − 6.48 | 7.76e − 19 | [ | |
| 10 | rs160459 | C | 14 | 59074136 | 2.98 | 1.98e − 10 | - | ||
| Dentate gyrus | 10 | rs160459 | C | 14 | 59074136 | 1.53 | 2.04e − 09 | - | |
| Molecular layer | 5 | rs4962694 | G | 10 | 126436717 | − 1.36 | 3.75e − 12 | [ | |
| Hippocampal tail | 11 | rs6675690 | G | 1 | 47945370 | 7.31 | 7.66e − 12 | - | |
| 12 | rs10888696 | A | 1 | 51016603 | 5.22 | 4.04e − 10 | - | ||
| 1 | rs2909443 | G | 2 | 162846439 | 6.11 | 3.08e − 13 | [ | ||
| 13 | rs13188633 | T | 5 | 81929360 | − 5.74 | 7.65e − 10 | - | ||
| 14 | rs10474356 | G | 5 | 90816402 | − 7.11 | 9.67e − 15 | - | ||
| 15 | rs55736786 | T | 5 | 93094118 | − 8.59 | 3.23e − 09 | - | ||
| 10 | rs160459 | C | 14 | 59074136 | − 7.45 | 1.53e − 17 | - |
† mm3 volume, additive effects for each copy of allele 1 (A1). BP base pair, Chr chromosome
Fig. 2Heatmap based on the results from the genome-wide association analyses, showing the p-value for each of the lead SNPs reported in Table 2 (on the y axis) per subfield (on the x axis) volume. High − log10 p-values are shown in red, low values in yellow. Three stars in a field indicate the SNP reached whole-genome significance for that SNP (6.5 × 10−9), two stars nominal significance (5 × 10−8) and one star suggestive significance (1 × 10−6)
Results from the conjunctional false discovery rate (FDR) analysis of the presubiculum and subiculum GWAS summary stats with those from the schizophrenia GWAS, identifying shared loci at a conjunctional FDR < 0.05
| Subfield | Locus | SNP | A1 | Chr | Position (BP) | Gene | Z-score subfield | Z-score schizophrenia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Presubiculum | 1 | rs3790598 | G | 1 | 113196896 | − 4.37 | 3.63 | |
| 2 | rs6427128 | A | 1 | 155026942 | − 5.23 | 3.70 | ||
| 3 | rs7766356 | T | 6 | 28400538 | − 4.20 | 8.16 | ||
| 4 | rs2554862 | C | 12 | 51202046 | − 3.97 | − 3.52 | ||
| 5 | rs9966779 | C | 18 | 53620456 | 3.72 | 4.85 | ||
| Subiculum | 1 | rs11584070 | A | 1 | 150294925 | 4.57 | 4.54 | |
| 2 | rs13107325 | C | 4 | 103188709 | − 4.17 | − 6.27 | ||
| 3 | rs10087493 | C | 8 | 8373557 | − 4.11 | − 3.87 | ||
| 4 | rs3114896 | T | 16 | 89393562 | − 4.18 | − 4.09 |
Fig. 3QQ plots of the p-values from the presubiculum and subiculum genome-wide association studies (GWAS), conditioned on those from a schizophrenia GWAS. For both subfields, there is a clear upward deflection from the expected p-value distribution (in grey) that strengthens with increasing thresholds; the black line reflects the distribution of p-values from the subfields with no schizophrenia p-value threshold, blue shows the distribution of p-values remaining at a threshold of p < 0.1, purple those at a threshold of p < 0.01 and red those at p < 0.001