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Consensus molecular environment of schizophrenia risk genes in coexpression networks shifting across age and brain regions.

Giulio PergolaMadhur PariharLeonardo SportelliRahul BharadwajChristopher BorcukEugenia RadulescuLoredana BellantuonoGiuseppe BlasiQiang ChenJoel E KleinmanYanhong WangSrinidhi Rao SripathyBrady J MaherAlfonso MonacoFabiana RossiJoo Heon ShinThomas M HydeAlessandro BertolinoDaniel R Weinberger
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental brain disorder whose genetic risk is associated with shifting clinical phenomena across the life span. We investigated the convergence of putative schizophrenia risk genes in brain coexpression networks in postmortem human prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and dentate gyrus granule cells, parsed by specific age periods (total N  = 833). The results support an early prefrontal involvement in the biology underlying schizophrenia and reveal a dynamic interplay of regions in which age parsing explains more variance in schizophrenia risk compared to lumping all age periods together. Across multiple data sources and publications, we identify 28 genes that are the most consistently found partners in modules enriched for schizophrenia risk genes in DLPFC; twenty-three are previously unidentified associations with schizophrenia. In iPSC-derived neurons, the relationship of these genes with schizophrenia risk genes is maintained. The genetic architecture of schizophrenia is embedded in shifting coexpression patterns across brain regions and time, potentially underwriting its shifting clinical presentation.
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