Human‐specific insights into candidate genes and boosted discoveries of novel loci illuminate roles of neuroglia in reading disorders

Author:

Wei Wen‐Hua1ORCID,Ma Shaowei2,Fu Bo3,Song Ranran4ORCID,Guo Hui1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Biostatistics, Division of Population Health, Health Services Research and Primary Care The University of Manchester Manchester UK

2. Hebei Key Laboratory of Children's Cognition and Digital Education and School of Foreign Languages Langfang Normal University Langfang China

3. School of Data Science Fudan University Shanghai China

4. Department of Maternal and Child Health and MOE (Ministry of Education) Key Laboratory of Environment and Health, School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College Huazhong University of Science and Technology Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractReading disorders (RD) are human‐specific neuropsychological conditions associated with decoding printed words and/or reading comprehension. So far only a handful of candidate genes segregated in families and 42 loci from genome‐wide association study (GWAS) have been identified that jointly provided little clues of pathophysiology. Leveraging human‐specific genomic information, we critically assessed the RD candidates for the first time and found substantial human‐specific features within. The GWAS candidates (i.e., population signals) were distinct from the familial counterparts and were more likely pleiotropic in neuropsychiatric traits and to harbor human‐specific regulatory elements (HSREs). Candidate genes associated with human cortical morphology indeed showed human‐specific expression in adult brain cortices, particularly in neuroglia likely regulated by HSREs. Expression levels of candidate genes across human brain developmental stages showed a clear pattern of uplifted expression in early brain development crucial to RD development. Following the new insights and loci pleiotropic in cognitive traits, we identified four novel genes from the GWAS sub‐significant associations (i.e., FOXO3, MAPT, KMT2E and HTT) and the Semaphorin gene family with functional priors (i.e., SEMA3A, SEMA3E and SEMA5B). These novel genes were related to neuronal plasticity and disorders, mostly conserved the pattern of uplifted expression in early brain development and had evident expression in cortical neuroglial cells. Our findings jointly illuminated the association of RD with neuroglia regulation—an emerging hotspot in studying neurodevelopmental disorders, and highlighted the need of improving RD phenotyping to avoid jeopardizing future genetic studies of RD.

Publisher

Wiley

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