Multi-scale systems genomics analysis predicts pathways, cell types, and drug targets involved in normative variation in peri-adolescent human cognition

Author:

Pai Shraddha123ORCID,Hui Shirley1ORCID,Weber Philipp4ORCID,Narayan Soumil1,Whitley Owen15ORCID,Li Peipei67ORCID,Labrie Viviane67ORCID,Baumbach Jan48ORCID,Wheeler Anne L910,Bader Gary D151112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Donnelly Centre, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada

2. Adaptive Oncology, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research , Toronto , Canada

3. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada

4. Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Southern Denmark , Odense , Denmark

5. Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada

6. Center for Neurodegenerative Science, Van Andel Research Institute , Grand Rapids, MI , United States

7. Division of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University , Grand Rapids, MI , United States

8. TUM School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan, Technical University of Munich , Munich , Germany

9. Neurosciences and Mental Health, The Hospital for Sick Children , Toronto , Canada

10. Department of Physiology, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada

11. Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada

12. The Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital , Toronto , Canada

Abstract

Abstract An open challenge in human genetics is to better understand the systems-level impact of genotype variation on developmental cognition. To characterize the genetic underpinnings of peri-adolescent cognition, we performed genotype–phenotype and systems analysis for binarized accuracy in nine cognitive tasks from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (~2,200 individuals of European continental ancestry aged 8–21 years). We report a region of genome-wide significance within the 3′ end of the Fibulin-1 gene (P = 4.6 × 10−8), associated with accuracy in nonverbal reasoning, a heritable form of complex reasoning ability. Diffusion tensor imaging data from a subset of these participants identified a significant association of white matter fractional anisotropy with FBLN1 genotypes (P < 0.025); poor performers show an increase in the C and A allele for rs77601382 and rs5765534, respectively, which is associated with increased fractional anisotropy. Integration of published human brain-specific ’omic maps, including single-cell transcriptomes of the developing human brain, shows that FBLN1 demonstrates greatest expression in the fetal brain, as a marker of intermediate progenitor cells, demonstrates negligible expression in the adolescent and adult human brain, and demonstrates increased expression in the brain in schizophrenia. Collectively these findings warrant further study of this gene and genetic locus in cognition, neurodevelopment, and disease. Separately, genotype-pathway analysis identified an enrichment of variants associated with working memory accuracy in pathways related to development and to autonomic nervous system dysfunction. Top-ranking pathway genes include those genetically associated with diseases with working memory deficits, such as schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease. This work advances the “molecules-to-behavior” view of cognition and provides a framework for using systems-level organization of data for other biomedical domains.

Funder

US National Institutes of Health

Canadian Institute for Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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