Establishing gene regulatory networks from Parkinson’s disease risk loci

Author:

Farrow Sophie L12ORCID,Schierding William12ORCID,Gokuladhas Sreemol1ORCID,Golovina Evgeniia1ORCID,Fadason Tayaza12ORCID,Cooper Antony A34ORCID,O’Sullivan Justin M12356ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Liggins Institute, The University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand

2. The Maurice Wilkins Centre, The University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand

3. Australian Parkinson’s Mission, Garvan Institute of Medical Research , Sydney, New South Wales , Australia

4. St Vincent’s Clinical School, UNSW Sydney , Sydney, New South Wales , Australia

5. Brain Research New Zealand, The University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand

6. MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton , UK

Abstract

Abstract The latest meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies identified 90 independent variants across 78 genomic regions associated with Parkinson’s disease, yet the mechanisms by which these variants influence the development of the disease remains largely elusive. To establish the functional gene regulatory networks associated with Parkinson’s disease risk variants, we utilized an approach combining spatial (chromosomal conformation capture) and functional (expression quantitative trait loci) data. We identified 518 genes subject to regulation by 76 Parkinson’s variants across 49 tissues, whicih encompass 36 peripheral and 13 CNS tissues. Notably, one-third of these genes were regulated via trans-acting mechanisms (distal; risk locus-gene separated by >1 Mb, or on different chromosomes). Of particular interest is the identification of a novel trans-expression quantitative trait loci–gene connection between rs10847864 and SYNJ1 in the adult brain cortex, highlighting a convergence between familial studies and Parkinson’s disease genome-wide association studies loci for SYNJ1 (PARK20) for the first time. Furthermore, we identified 16 neurodevelopment-specific expression quantitative trait loci–gene regulatory connections within the foetal cortex, consistent with hypotheses suggesting a neurodevelopmental involvement in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease. Through utilizing Louvain clustering we extracted nine significant and highly intraconnected clusters within the entire gene regulatory network. The nine clusters are enriched for specific biological processes and pathways, some of which have not previously been associated with Parkinson’s disease. Together, our results not only contribute to an overall understanding of the mechanisms and impact of specific combinations of Parkinson’s disease variants, but also highlight the potential impact gene regulatory networks may have when elucidating aetiological subtypes of Parkinson’s disease.

Funder

Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s research

Silverstein Foundation

Dines Family Charitable Trust

MBIE Catalyst Grant

University of Auckland Doctoral Scholarship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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