| Literature DB >> 31659271 |
Daniel E Vosberg1,2,3, Marco Leyton4,5,6, Cecilia Flores7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Axon guidance molecules direct growing axons toward their targets, assembling the intricate wiring of the nervous system. One of these molecules, Netrin-1, and its receptor, DCC (deleted in colorectal cancer), has profound effects, in laboratory animals, on the adolescent expansion of mesocorticolimbic pathways, particularly dopamine. Now, a rapidly growing literature suggests that (1) these same alterations could occur in humans, and (2) genetic variants in Netrin-1 and DCC are associated with depression, schizophrenia, and substance use. Together, these findings provide compelling evidence that Netrin-1 and DCC influence mesocorticolimbic-related psychopathological states that emerge during adolescence.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31659271 PMCID: PMC6974431 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-019-0561-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992
Fig. 1a DCC-mediated Netrin-1 connectivity-related processes. Throughout adolescent brain development, target recognition, axon arborization, and synapse formation are ongoing including dopamine axon targettting, long distance axonal growth, and synaptogenesis by mesocorticolimbic dopamine axons. Green gradients indicate Netrin-1 and the depicted axons express DCC. b Dcc Mutation Behavioral Effects in Mice. Ages, in post-natal days (P), and periods (early adolescence, mid adolescence, and adulthood) at which stimulant drug-induced effects on reward and information processing emerge in Dcc haploinsufficient mice. The effects are in green, based on studies of Dcc haploinsufficient mice [6, 7]. c Age of Onset of DCC-implicated Psychiatric Disorders. The DCC-implicated psychiatric disorders, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and substance use disorder, begin to emerge in adolescence. The interquartile ranges (25th to 75th percentiles) are indicated in green. The median ages of onset for major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and substance use disorder are 32, 23, and 20, respectively. Data to construct the figure were obtained from a U.S. survey and an international review [17, 18]
Fig. 2Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and associated phenotypes in the DCC gene. Depicted here is the 5′−3′ oriented DCC gene, comprising 29 exons (red), intervening introns (gray), untranslated regions (UTR; teal), transcriptional start site (TSS) region, promoter region, start codon (ATG) and stop codon. The rs ID for each SNP and associated phenotype(s) are indicated. The phenotypes are cross disorder (yellow), smoking (light green), depression (blue), schizophrenia (dark green), mood instability (orange), and putamen volume (purple). The gene structure and SNP locations were determined using the NCBI tool, Variation Viewer (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/variation/view/), using the genome assembly, GRCh38.p12
Summary of human genetic studies of DCC and Netrin-1
| References | Genetic approach | Gene | Sample size | Ancestry | Phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manitt et al. [ | mRNA expression | 30 cases, 35 controls | Not available | Depressed suicide completers | |
| Dunn et al. [ | Genome-wide association study (GWAS) | 3138 | Hispanic | Depression | |
| Okbay et al. [ | GWAS | 161,460 | European | Depression | |
| Smith et al. [ | Meta-GWAS | 91,370, replication samples: (6659, 8687) | White, United Kingdom | Neuroticism | |
| Torres-Berrío et al. [ | mRNA expression | 11 cases, 12 controls | Not available | Depressed suicide completers | |
| Zeng et al. [ | Pathway analysis, multilevel regional heritability, and polygenic risk score | Netrin-1 signaling pathway | 25,214 | European | Depression |
| Aberg et al. [ | Methylome-wide association study (MWAS) | 812 cases, 320 controls | European | Depression | |
| Leday et al. [ | Genome-wide gene expression | 207 cases, 157 controls | Caucasion | Depression | |
| Roberson-Nay et al. [ | Genome-wide methylation study | 150 monozygotic twin pairs | Caucasion | Depression | |
| Wray et al. [ | GWAS | 135,458 cases, 344,901 controls | European | Depression | |
| Arnau-Soler et al. [ | Gene-based test | 99,057 | White, United Kingdom | Depression | |
| Barbu et al. [ | Polygenic risk score | Netrin-1 signaling pathway | ~6400 | Not available | Depression |
| Lee et al. [ | Meta-GWAS | 232,964 cases, 494,162 controls | European | Cross-disorder | |
| Strawbridge et al. [ | Gene-based test | 122,935 | White, United Kingdom | Suicidality | |
| Ward et al. [ | Meta-GWAS, polygenic score, genetic correlations | 375,275 | European | Anhedonia | |
| Khadka et al. [ | Parallel independent component analysis | 426 | Caucasion, African-American, Hispanic, other | Impulsivity | |
| Zanetti et al. [ | GWAS | 5339, replication: 1662 | African-American | Cigarette smoking | |
| Ward et al. [ | GWAS | 53,525 cases, 60,443 controls | White, United Kingdom | Mood Instability | |
| Vosberg et al. [ | Rare mutation cohort | 20 cases, 36 controls | Caucasion French Canadian (cases) | Novelty seeking & tobacco use | |
| Kichaev et al. [ | GWAS | European | Cigarette smoking | ||
| Lee et al. [ | Meta-GWAS | 232,964 cases, 494,162 controls | European | Cross-disorder | |
| Linnér et al. [ | Meta-GWAS | European | Cigarette smoking | ||
| Grant et al. [ | Candidate gene | 556 cases, 208 controls | African American, Asian, Caucasion | Schizophrenia | |
| Yan et al. [ | Candidate gene | 454 cases, 486 controls | Han Chinese | Schizophrenia | |
| Okayama et al. [ | Next-generation sequencing | 3 cases | Japanese | Atypical psychosis | |
| Smeland et al. [ | GWAS | 82,315 | European, East Asian | Schizophrenia | |
| Lee et al. [ | Meta-GWAS | 232,964 cases, 494,162 controls | European | Cross-disorder | |
| Hibar et al. [ | GWAS | 30,717 | European | Putamen Volume | |
| Elliot et al. [90] | GWAS | 9707 | White, United Kingdom | Putamen Volume | |
| Luo et al. [ | Polygenic risk score | Schizophrenia-associated genes including | Discovery ( | Han Chinese | Putamen, thalamus, temporal gyrus volumes; mPFC rs-fMRI activity; working-memory |
| Smeland et al. [ | GWAS | 11,598 | European | Putamen volume | |
| Vosberg et al. [ | Rare mutation cohort | 20 cases, 36 controls | Caucasion French Canadian (cases) | Mesocorticolimbic anatomical connectivity & putamen volume | |
| Barbu et al. [ | Polygenic risk score | Netrin-1 signaling pathway | ~6400 | Not available | Thalamic raditions, white matter integrity |
Summary of DCC and Netrin-1 effects across brain regions
| Brain region | Measure | Mice | Humans |
|---|---|---|---|
| Striatum | A. Expression | High DCC, low Netrin-1 | Both Netrin-1 and DCC are expressed and their expression decreases across the lifespan |
| B. Volume | Reduced in ventral striatum | Reduced in dorsal striatum | |
| C. Connectivity | Reduced mesolimbic dopamine innervation | Reduced mesolimbic anatomical connectivity | |
| Cortex | A. Expression | Low DCC, high Netrin-1 (mPFC) | Higher DCC than Netrin-1 (prenatally) |
| B. Volume | No difference | Reduced | |
| C. Connectivity | Increased mesocortical dopamine innervation | Reduced mesocortical anatomical connectivity |
(A) DCC and Netrin-1 relative expression levels in wild-type mice [7] and humans [39] (See also: http://development.psychencode.org). Group differences in (B) volumes and (C) connectivity in DCC haploinsufficient mice [7] and humans [79], relative to control groups