Transcriptomics and proteomics of projection neurons in a circuit linking hippocampus with dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in the human brain
Borcuk, C.; Bharadwaj, R. A.; Kikidis, G. C.; Mallepalli, V.; Sportelli, L.; Bertolino, A.; Cole, R. N.; DeVine, L. R.; Kleinman, J. E.; Maher, B. J.; Sripathy, S. R.; Parihar, M.; Shin, J. H.; Lee, Y. K.; Montoya, C.; Deep-Soboslay, A.; Hyde, T. M.; Weinberger, D. R.; Pergola, G.
Show abstract
Transcriptome and proteome sequencing of brain tissue homogenate has helped unravel processes underlying schizophrenia (SCZ). However, most studies have lacked granularity at the cell type level and have focused on individual brain regions, rather than examining expression dynamics across multiple regions or illness-relevant circuitries. We used laser capture microdissection to collect excitatory neuron-enriched samples from hippocampal subregions CA1 and presubiculum (SUB), and from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a circuit prominently implicated in schizophrenia. Using RNA sequencing and quantitative proteomics, we show significantly superior discrimination of brain regional identity in the transcriptomic (>90% accuracy) and proteomic data (>97% accuracy) compared with gene-level expression data (<70% in bulk). Patients with SCZ show hippocampal-specific differential protein phosphorylation. SCZ risk co-expression gene-sets that replicate across transcript and protein networks are enriched for transmembrane transporters in the DLPFC and CA1 and postsynaptic processes in the SUB. We demonstrate a strong directional connectivity effect of SCZ risk in that excitatory synaptic genes in CA1 unidirectionally predict gene expression in SUB. Finally, parallel CA1 snRNA-seq results suggest that in SCZ excitatory efferents in CA1 are affected by interactions with glia and by downregulation of inhibitory neuropeptide inputs. Our study proposes molecular mechanisms by which hippocampal communication, previously associated with SCZ at the macroscopic level, may be altered at the inter-field and interregional circuit level.
Matching journals
The top 5 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.