Systems Genetics Analyses Reveals Key Genes Related to Behavioral Traits in the Striatum of CFW Mice
-
Published:2024-05-22
Issue:26
Volume:44
Page:e0252242024
-
ISSN:0270-6474
-
Container-title:The Journal of Neuroscience
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:J. Neurosci.
Author:
Han Zhe,Yang Chunhua,He Hongjie,Huang Tingting,Yin Quanting,Tian Geng,Wu Yuyong,Hu Wei,Lu Lu,Bajpai Akhilesh Kumar,Mi Jia,Xu Fuyi
Abstract
The striatum plays a central role in directing many complex behaviors ranging from motor control to action choice and reward learning. In our study, we used 55 male CFW mice with rapid decay linkage disequilibrium to systematically mine the striatum-related behavioral functional genes by analyzing their striatal transcriptomes and 79 measured behavioral phenotypic data. By constructing a gene coexpression network, we clustered the genes into 13 modules, with most of them being positively correlated with motor traits. Based on functional annotations as well as Fisher's exact and hypergeometric distribution tests, brown and magenta modules were identified as core modules. They were significantly enriched for striatal-related functional genes. Subsequent Mendelian randomization analysis verified the causal relationship between the core modules and dyskinesia. Through the intramodular gene connectivity analysis,Adcy5andKcnma1were identified as brown and magenta module hub genes, respectively. Knock outs of bothAdcy5andKcnma1lead to motor dysfunction in mice, andKCNMA1acts as a risk gene for schizophrenia and smoking addiction in humans. We also evaluated the cellular composition of each module and identified oligodendrocytes in the striatum to have a positive role in motor regulation.
Funder
Taishan Scholars Construction Engineering, National Natural Science Foundation of China
Major Basic Research of Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation
Key research and development program of Shandong province
山东省科学技术厅 | Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province
Shandong province Higher Educational Youth Innovation Science and Technology Program
Binzhou Medical University Research Start-up
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience