Transcriptomic sex differences in postmortem brain samples from patients with psychiatric disorders

IF 15.8 1区 医学 Q1 CELL BIOLOGY Science Translational Medicine Pub Date : 2024-05-23 DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.adh9974
Yan Xia, Cuihua Xia, Yi Jiang, Yu Chen, Jiaqi Zhou, Rujia Dai, Cong Han, Zhongzheng Mao, PsychENCODE Consortium, Chunyu Liu, Chao Chen
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Abstract

Many psychiatric disorders exhibit sex differences, but the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. We analyzed transcriptomics data from 2160 postmortem adult prefrontal cortex brain samples from the PsychENCODE consortium in a sex-stratified study design. We compared transcriptomics data of postmortem brain samples from patients with schizophrenia (SCZ), bipolar disorder (BD), and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) with transcriptomics data of postmortem control brains from individuals without a known history of psychiatric disease. We found that brain samples from females with SCZ, BD, and ASD showed a higher burden of transcriptomic dysfunction than did brain samples from males with these disorders. This observation was supported by the larger number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and a greater magnitude of gene expression changes observed in female versus male brain specimens. In addition, female patient brain samples showed greater overall connectivity dysfunction, defined by a higher proportion of gene coexpression modules with connectivity changes and higher connectivity burden, indicating a greater degree of gene coexpression variability. We identified several gene coexpression modules enriched in sex-biased DEGs and identified genes from a genome-wide association study that were involved in immune and synaptic functions across different brain cell types. We found a number of genes as hubs within these modules, including those encoding SCN2A, FGF14, and C3. Our results suggest that in the context of psychiatric diseases, males and females exhibit different degrees of transcriptomic dysfunction and implicate immune and synaptic-related pathways in these sex differences.
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精神病患者死后大脑样本的转录组性别差异。
许多精神疾病都表现出性别差异,但人们对其潜在机制仍然知之甚少。我们采用性别分层研究设计,分析了来自 PsychENCODE 联盟的 2,160 份成人前额叶皮层死后脑样本的转录组学数据。我们比较了精神分裂症(SCZ)、双相情感障碍(BD)和自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)患者死后大脑样本的转录组学数据和无精神病史的死后对照组大脑的转录组学数据。我们发现,与患有这些疾病的男性相比,患有SCZ、BD和ASD的女性大脑样本显示出更高的转录组功能障碍负担。在女性与男性脑样本中观察到的差异表达基因(DEGs)数量更多,基因表达变化的幅度更大,这些都支持了这一观察结果。此外,女性患者的大脑样本显示出更严重的整体连接功能障碍,其定义是连接功能发生变化的基因共表达模块比例更高,连接功能负担更重,这表明基因共表达的可变性更大。我们发现了几个富含性别偏向DEGs的基因共表达模块,并从全基因组关联研究中发现了涉及不同脑细胞类型的免疫和突触功能的基因。我们在这些模块中发现了一些基因作为枢纽,包括编码 SCN2A、FGF14 和 C3 的基因。我们的研究结果表明,在精神疾病方面,男性和女性表现出不同程度的转录组功能障碍,而这些性别差异与免疫和突触相关通路有关。
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来源期刊
Science Translational Medicine
Science Translational Medicine CELL BIOLOGY-MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
CiteScore
26.70
自引率
1.20%
发文量
309
审稿时长
1.7 months
期刊介绍: Science Translational Medicine is an online journal that focuses on publishing research at the intersection of science, engineering, and medicine. The goal of the journal is to promote human health by providing a platform for researchers from various disciplines to communicate their latest advancements in biomedical, translational, and clinical research. The journal aims to address the slow translation of scientific knowledge into effective treatments and health measures. It publishes articles that fill the knowledge gaps between preclinical research and medical applications, with a focus on accelerating the translation of knowledge into new ways of preventing, diagnosing, and treating human diseases. The scope of Science Translational Medicine includes various areas such as cardiovascular disease, immunology/vaccines, metabolism/diabetes/obesity, neuroscience/neurology/psychiatry, cancer, infectious diseases, policy, behavior, bioengineering, chemical genomics/drug discovery, imaging, applied physical sciences, medical nanotechnology, drug delivery, biomarkers, gene therapy/regenerative medicine, toxicology and pharmacokinetics, data mining, cell culture, animal and human studies, medical informatics, and other interdisciplinary approaches to medicine. The target audience of the journal includes researchers and management in academia, government, and the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. It is also relevant to physician scientists, regulators, policy makers, investors, business developers, and funding agencies.
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