Abstract
SummaryBackgroundStriatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) are preferentially lost in Huntington’s disease. Genomic studies also implicate a direct role for MSNs in schizophrenia, a psychiatric disorder known to involve cortical neuron dysfunction. It remains unknown whether the two diseases share similar MSN pathogenesis or if neuronal deficits can be attributed to cell type-dependent biological pathways. Transcription factor BCL11B, which is expressed by all MSNs and deep layer cortical neurons, was recently proposed to drive selective neurodegeneration in Huntington’s disease and identified as a candidate risk gene in schizophrenia.MethodsUsing human stem cell-derived neurons lacking BCL11B as a model, we investigated cellular pathology in MSNs and cortical neurons in the context of these disorders. Integrative analyses between differentially expressed transcripts and published GWAS datasets identified cell type-specific disease-related phenotypes.ResultsWe uncover a role for BCL11B in calcium homeostasis in both neuronal types, while deficits in mitochondrial function and protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent calcium transients are detected only in MSNs. Moreover, BCL11B-deficient MSNs display abnormal responses to glutamate and fail to integrate dopaminergic and glutamatergic stimulation, a key feature of striatal neurons in vivo. Gene enrichment analysis reveals overrepresentation of disorder risk genes among BCL11B-regulated pathways, primarily relating to cAMP-PKA-calcium signaling axis and synaptic signaling.ConclusionsOur study indicates that Huntington’s disease and schizophrenia are likely to share neuronal pathogenesis where dysregulation of intracellular calcium levels is found in both striatal and cortical neurons. In contrast, reduction in PKA signaling and abnormal dopamine/glutamate receptor signaling is largely specific to MSNs.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory