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Ethnicity-Dependent Effects of Schizophrenia Risk Variants of the OLIG2 Gene on OLIG2 Transcription and White Matter Integrity

Authors :
Takashi Ono
Junko Ito
Yuko Saito
Hiroaki Tomita
Nobuo Fuse
Kunio Iizuka
Zhiqian Yu
Akiyoshi Kakita
Mari Yoshida
Hiroshi Komatsu
Yasuto Kunii
Mizuki Hino
Yasuyuki Taki
Noriko Kudo
Michiko Fujimoto
Hirooki Yabe
Yasushi Iwasaki
Hirotsugu Azechi
Yuji Takano
Chiaki Ono
Ryota Hashimoto
Yoshihisa Kakuto
Shunichi Funakoshi
Ryuta Kawashima
Yuka Yasuda
Yoshie Kikuchi
Hikaru Takeuchi
Hidenaga Yamamori
Atsuko Nagaoka
Source :
Schizophr Bull
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2020.

Abstract

Previous studies have indicated associations between several OLIG2 gene single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and susceptibility to schizophrenia among Caucasians. Consistent with these findings, postmortem brain and diffusion tensor imaging studies have indicated that the schizophrenia-risk-associated allele (A) in the OLIG2 SNP rs1059004 predicts lower OLIG2 gene expression in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) of schizophrenia patients and reduced white matter (WM) integrity of the corona radiata in normal brains among Caucasians. In an effort to replicate the association between this variant and WM integrity among healthy Japanese, we found that the number of A alleles was positively correlated with WM integrity in some fiber tracts, including the right posterior limb of the internal capsule, and with mean blood flow in a widespread area, including the inferior frontal operculum, orbital area, and triangular gyrus. Because the A allele affected WM integrity in opposite directions in Japanese and Caucasians, we investigated a possible association between the OLIG2 gene SNPs and the expression level of OLIG2 transcripts in postmortem DLPFCs. We evaluated rs1059004 and additional SNPs in the 5′ upstream and 3′ downstream regions of rs1059004 to cover the broader region of the OLIG2 gene. The 2 SNPs (rs1059004 and rs9653711) had opposite effects on OLIG2 gene expression in the DLPFC in Japanese and Caucasians. These findings suggest ethnicity-dependent opposite effects of OLIG2 gene SNPs on WM integrity and OLIG2 gene expression in the brain, which may partially explain the failures in replicating associations between genetic variants and psychiatric phenotypes among ethnicities.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Schizophr Bull
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ce63cf625e0415f758ab1511cf7574b