Common genetic variation impacts stress response in the brain.

Carina Seah,Rebecca Signer,Michael Deans, Heather Bader, Tom Rusielewicz, Emily M Hicks,Hannah Young,Alanna Cote,Kayla Townsley,Changxin Xu, Christopher J Hunter,Barry McCarthy, Jordan Goldberg, Saunil Dobariya, Paul E Holtzherimer,Keith A Young, , , Scott A Noggle, John H Krystal, Daniel Paull, Matthew J Girgenti, Rachel Yehuda, Kristen J Brennand, Laura M Huckins

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2023)

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摘要
To explain why individuals exposed to identical stressors experience divergent clinical outcomes, we determine how molecular encoding of stress modifies genetic risk for brain disorders. Analysis of post-mortem brain (n=304) revealed 8557 stress-interactive expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) that dysregulate expression of 915 eGenes in response to stress, and lie in stress-related transcription factor binding sites. Response to stress is robust across experimental paradigms: up to 50% of stress-interactive eGenes validate in glucocorticoid treated hiPSC-derived neurons (n=39 donors). Stress-interactive eGenes show brain region- and cell type-specificity, and, in post-mortem brain, implicate glial and endothelial mechanisms. Stress dysregulates long-term expression of disorder risk genes in a genotype-dependent manner; stress-interactive transcriptomic imputation uncovered 139 novel genes conferring brain disorder risk only in the context of traumatic stress. Molecular stress-encoding explains individualized responses to traumatic stress; incorporating trauma into genomic studies of brain disorders is likely to improve diagnosis, prognosis, and drug discovery.
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