Transcriptional signatures of cortical structural changes in chronic insomnia disorder

Author:

Yu Liyong1ORCID,Hu Daijie12,Luo Yucai1,Lin Wenting3,Xu Hao4,Xiao Xiangwen1,Xia Zihao1,Dou Zeyang1,Zhao Guangli3,Yang Lu1,Peng Dezhong1,Zhang Qi5,Yu Siyi1

Affiliation:

1. School of Acupuncture and Tuina, Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine Chengdu China

2. Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine Rehabilitation Chongqing University Three Gorges Hospital Chongqing China

3. School of Rehabilitation and Health Preservation, Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine Chengdu China

4. School of Medical Imaging, North Sichuan Medical College Nanchong China

5. Department of Anorectal Surgery Chongqing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine Chongqing China

Abstract

AbstractChronic insomnia disorder (CID) is a multidimensional disease that may influence various levels of brain organization, spanning the macroscopic structural connectome to microscopic gene expression. However, the connection between genomic variations and morphological alterations in CID remains unclear. Here, we investigated brain structural changes in CID patients at the whole‐brain level and whether these link to transcriptional characteristics. Brain structural data from 104 CID patients and 102 matched healthy controls (HC) were acquired to examine cortical structural alterations using morphometric similarity (MS) analysis. Partial least squares (PLS) regression and transcriptome data from the Allen Human Brain Atlas were used to extract genomes related to MS changes. Gene‐category enrichment analysis (GCEA) was used to identify potential molecular mechanisms behind the observed structural changes. We found that CID patients exhibited MS reductions in the parietal and limbic regions, along with enhancements in the temporal and frontal regions compared to HCs (pFDR < .05). Subsequently, PLS and GCEA revealed that these MS alterations were spatially correlated with a set of genes, especially those significantly correlated with excitatory and inhibitory neurons and chronic neuroinflammation. This neuroimaging‐transcriptomic study bridges the gap between cortical structural changes and the molecular mechanisms in CID patients, providing novel insight into the pathophysiology of insomnia and targeted treatments.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing Municipality

Science and Technology Department of Sichuan Province

Publisher

Wiley

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