| Literature DB >> 32203495 |
Andrew E Jaffe1,2,3,4,5,6, Daniel J Hoeppner7,8,9, Takeshi Saito8, Lou Blanpain7, Joy Ukaigwe7, Emily E Burke7, Leonardo Collado-Torres7, Ran Tao7, Katsunori Tajinda8, Kristen R Maynard7, Matthew N Tran7, Keri Martinowich7,10,11, Amy Deep-Soboslay7, Joo Heon Shin7, Joel E Kleinman7,11, Daniel R Weinberger7,12,10,11,13, Mitsuyuki Matsumoto14,15, Thomas M Hyde16,17,18.
Abstract
Specific cell populations may have unique contributions to schizophrenia but may be missed in studies of homogenate tissue. Here laser capture microdissection followed by RNA sequencing (LCM-seq) was used to transcriptomically profile the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus (DG-GCL) in human hippocampus and contrast these data to those obtained from bulk hippocampal homogenate. We identified widespread cell-type-enriched aging and genetic effects in the DG-GCL that were either absent or directionally discordant in bulk hippocampus data. Of the ~9 million expression quantitative trait loci identified in the DG-GCL, 15% were not detected in bulk hippocampus, including 15 schizophrenia risk variants. We created transcriptome-wide association study genetic weights from the DG-GCL, which identified many schizophrenia-associated genetic signals not found in transcriptome-wide association studies from bulk hippocampus, including GRM3 and CACNA1C. These results highlight the improved biological resolution provided by targeted sampling strategies like LCM and complement homogenate and single-nucleus approaches in human brain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32203495 DOI: 10.1038/s41593-020-0604-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Neurosci ISSN: 1097-6256 Impact factor: 24.884