Literature DB >> 30545964

The transcription factor POU3F2 regulates a gene coexpression network in brain tissue from patients with psychiatric disorders.

Chao Chen1,2, Qingtuan Meng3, Yan Xia3,4, Chaodong Ding3,4, Le Wang3,5, Rujia Dai3,4, Lijun Cheng6, Preethi Gunaratne7, Richard A Gibbs8, Shishi Min3, Cristian Coarfa8, Jeffrey G Reid9, Chunling Zhang10, Chuan Jiao4, Yi Jiang3,11, Gina Giase12, Amber Thomas6, Dominic Fitzgerald6, Tonya Brunetti6,13, Annie Shieh4, Cuihua Xia3, Yongjun Wang14, Yunpeng Wang15,16, Judith A Badner17, Elliot S Gershon18, Kevin P White6,19, Chunyu Liu1,4,20.   

Abstract

Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are complex psychiatric diseases with risks contributed by multiple genes. Dysregulation of gene expression has been implicated in these disorders, but little is known about such dysregulation in the human brain. We analyzed three transcriptome datasets from 394 postmortem brain tissue samples from patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder or from healthy control individuals without a known history of psychiatric disease. We built genome-wide coexpression networks that included microRNAs (miRNAs). We identified a coexpression network module that was differentially expressed in the brain tissue from patients compared to healthy control individuals. This module contained genes that were principally involved in glial and neural cell genesis and glial cell differentiation, and included schizophrenia risk genes carrying rare variants. This module included five miRNAs and 545 mRNAs, with six transcription factors serving as hub genes in this module. We found that the most connected transcription factor gene POU3F2, also identified on a genome-wide association study for bipolar disorder, could regulate the miRNA hsa-miR-320e and other putative target mRNAs. These regulatory relationships were replicated using PsychENCODE/BrainGVEX datasets and validated by knockdown and overexpression experiments in SH-SY5Y cells and human neural progenitor cells in vitro. Thus, we identified a brain gene expression module that was enriched for rare coding variants in genes associated with schizophrenia and that contained the putative bipolar disorder risk gene POU3F2 The transcription factor POU3F2 may be a key regulator of gene expression in this disease-associated gene coexpression module.
Copyright © 2018 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30545964      PMCID: PMC6494100          DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aat8178

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Transl Med        ISSN: 1946-6234            Impact factor:   17.956


  61 in total

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