Single-nucleus multi-omics of Parkinson's disease reveals a glutamatergic neuronal subtype susceptible to gene dysregulation via alteration of transcriptional networks.

Abstract

The genetic architecture of Parkinson's disease (PD) is complex and multiple brain cell subtypes are involved in the neuropathological progression of the disease. Here we aimed to advance our understanding of PD genetic complexity at a cell subtype precision level. Using parallel single-nucleus (sn)RNA-seq and snATAC-seq analyses we simultaneously profiled the transcriptomic and chromatin accessibility landscapes in temporal cortex tissues from 12 PD compared to 12 control subjects at a granular single cell resolution. An integrative bioinformatic pipeline was developed and applied for the analyses of these snMulti-omics datasets. The results identified a subpopulation of cortical glutamatergic excitatory neurons with remarkably altered gene expression in PD, including differentially-expressed genes within PD risk loci identified in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). This was the only neuronal subtype showing significant and robust overexpression of SNCA. Further characterization of this neuronal-subpopulation showed upregulation of specific pathways related to axon guidance, neurite outgrowth and post-synaptic structure, and downregulated pathways involved in presynaptic organization and calcium response. Additionally, we characterized the roles of three molecular mechanisms in governing PD-associated cell subtype-specific dysregulation of gene expression: (1) changes in cis-regulatory element accessibility to transcriptional machinery; (2) changes in the abundance of master transcriptional regulators, including YY1, SP3, and KLF16; (3) candidate regulatory variants in high linkage disequilibrium with PD-GWAS genomic variants impacting transcription factor binding affinities. To our knowledge, this study is the first and the most comprehensive interrogation of the multi-omics landscape of PD at a cell-subtype resolution. Our findings provide new insights into a precise glutamatergic neuronal cell subtype, causal genes, and non-coding regulatory variants underlying the neuropathological progression of PD, paving the way for the development of cell- and gene-targeted therapeutics to halt disease progression as well as genetic biomarkers for early preclinical diagnosis.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Temporal Lobe, Neurons, Humans, Parkinson Disease, Gene Expression Regulation, Aged, Middle Aged, Female, Male, YY1 Transcription Factor, alpha-Synuclein, Gene Regulatory Networks, Genome-Wide Association Study, Single-Cell Analysis, Transcriptome, Multiomics

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1186/s40478-024-01803-1

Publication Info

Shwab, E Keats, Daniel C Gingerich, Zhaohui Man, Julia Gamache, Melanie E Garrett, Gregory E Crawford, Allison E Ashley-Koch, Geidy E Serrano, et al. (2024). Single-nucleus multi-omics of Parkinson's disease reveals a glutamatergic neuronal subtype susceptible to gene dysregulation via alteration of transcriptional networks. Acta neuropathologica communications, 12(1). p. 111. 10.1186/s40478-024-01803-1 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33611.

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Scholars@Duke

Ashley-Koch

Allison Elizabeth Ashley-Koch

Professor in Medicine

My work focuses on the dissection of human traits using multi-omic technologies (genetics, epigenetics, metabolomics and proteomics).  I am investigating the basis of several neurological and psychiatric conditions such as neural tube defects and post-traumatic stress disorder. I also study modifiers of sickle cell disease.

Lutz

Michael William Lutz

Professor in Neurology

Developing and using computational biology methods to understand the genetic basis of disease with a focus on Alzheimer’s Disease.   Recent work has focused on identification and validation of clinically-relevant biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease with Lewy bodies.

Chiba-Falek

Ornit Chiba-Falek

Professor in Neurology

Functional genomics
Non-coding regulatory variants in the human genome
Genetics of complex neurological diseases


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