Cross-tissue transcriptome-wide association studies identify susceptibility genes shared between schizophrenia and inflammatory bowel disease

Florian Uellendahl-Werth (First Author), Carlo Maj (Co-Author), Oleg Borisov (Co-Author), Simonas Juzenas (Co-Author), Eike Matthias Wacker (Co-Author), Isabella Friis Jørgensen (Co-Author), Tim Alexander Steiert (Co-Author), Saptarshi Bej (Co-Author), Peter Krawitz (Co-Author), Per Hoffmann (Co-Author), Christoph Schramm (Co-Author), Olaf Wolkenhauer (Co-Author), Karina Banasik (Co-Author), Søren Brunak (Co-Author), Stefan Schreiber (Co-Author), Tom Hemming Karlsen (Co-Author), Franziska Degenhardt (Co-Author), Markus Nöthen (Co-Author), Andre Franke (Co-Author), Trine Folseraas (Co-Author)David Ellinghaus* (Last Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    26 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Genetic correlations and an increased incidence of psychiatric disorders in inflammatory-bowel disease have been reported, but shared molecular mechanisms are unknown. We performed cross-tissue and multiple-gene conditioned transcriptome-wide association studies for 23 tissues of the gut-brain-axis using genome-wide association studies data sets (total 180,592 patients) for Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. We identified NR5A2, SATB2, and PPP3CA (encoding a target for calcineurin inhibitors in refractory ulcerative colitis) as shared susceptibility genes with transcriptome-wide significance both for Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis and schizophrenia, largely explaining fine-mapped association signals at nearby genome-wide association study susceptibility loci. Analysis of bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data showed that PPP3CA expression was strongest in neurons and in enteroendocrine and Paneth-like cells of the ileum, colon, and rectum, indicating a possible link to the gut-brain-axis. PPP3CA together with three further suggestive loci can be linked to calcineurin-related signaling pathways such as NFAT activation or Wnt.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number80
    JournalCommunications Biology
    Volume5
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Dec 2022

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