Variants and expression changes in PPAR-encoding genes display no significant association with schizophrenia

Author:

Li Xinrong1,Zhu Yue2,Keaton Maria3,Baranova Ancha34,Liu Sha1,Hu Xiaodong1,Li Qi1,Cheng Long1,Zhou Peng2,Cao Hongbao13ORCID,Xu Yong1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, First Hospital /First Clinical Medical College of Shanxi Medical University, Taiyuan, China

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tianjin University, Tianjin, China

3. School of Systems Biology, George Mason University (GMU), Fairfax, VA 22030, U.S.A.

4. Research Center for Medical Genetics, Moscow, Russia

Abstract

Abstract A few studies suggested the contribution of PPARs to the etiology of schizophrenia (SCZ). However, it is still not clear whether variants in PPAR-encoding genes have a direct association with SCZ. The potential linkage between SCZ and the variants within PPAR encoding genes (PPARA, PPARD, and PPARG) was tested in a large cohort genome-wide association study (GWAS). Then, a mega-analysis was conducted using 14 gene expression profiling experiments in various human brain regions. Finally, the expression levels of the three PPAR-encoding genes were quantified in early-onset SCZ patients. Only one PPARG polymorphisms, rs62242085, presented a minor frequency deviation in the SCZ cohort (P-value = 0.035). None of the PPAR-encoding genes presented significant expression change within the brain regions profiled in 14 datasets acquired from different populations (P-value > 0.14) or in the whole blood of early-onset overall SCZ patients (P-value > 0.22). However, compared with healthy female controls, female early-onset SCZ patients presented a moderate but significant decrease in the expression level of PPARD (LFC = −0.55; P-value = 0.02) and a strong, but non-significant decrease in expression of PPARG (LFC = −1.30; P-value = 0.13). Our results do not support a significant association between variants in PPAR-encoding genes and SCZ, but suggest a necessity to explore the role of PPARD and PPARG in early SCZ phenotypes, specifically in females.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Biophysics

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