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Contribution of astrocytes to familial risk and clinical manifestation of schizophrenia

Authors :
Marja Koskuvi
Šárka Lehtonen
Kalevi Trontti
Meike Keuters
Ying‐Chieh Wu
Hennariikka Koivisto
Anastasia Ludwig
Lidiia Plotnikova
Pekka L. J. Virtanen
Noora Räsänen
Satu Kaipainen
Ida Hyötyläinen
Hiramani Dhungana
Raisa Giniatullina
Ilkka Ojansuu
Olli Vaurio
Tyrone D. Cannon
Jouko Lönnqvist
Sebastian Therman
Jaana Suvisaari
Jaakko Kaprio
Markku Lähteenvuo
Jussi Tohka
Rashid Giniatullin
Claudio Rivera
Iiris Hovatta
Heikki Tanila
Jari Tiihonen
Jari Koistinaho
Neuroscience Center
SLEEPWELL Research Program
Department of Psychology and Logopedics
Faculty Common Matters (Faculty of Biology and Environmental Sciences)
HUS Psychiatry
Clinicum
Department of Psychiatry
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
Helsinki In Vivo Animal Imaging Platform (HAIP)
Claudio Rivera Baeza / Principal Investigator
Biosciences
Mind and Matter
Iiris Hovatta / Principal Investigator
Genetics
Source :
Glia. 70(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Previous studies have implicated several brain cell types in schizophrenia (SCZ), but the genetic impact of astrocytes is unknown. Considering their high complexity in humans, astrocytes are likely key determinants of neurodevelopmental diseases, such as SCZ. Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived astrocytes differentiated from five monozygotic twin pairs discordant for SCZ and five healthy subjects were studied for alterations related to high genetic risk and clinical manifestation of SCZ in astrocyte transcriptomics, neuron-astrocyte co-cultures, and in humanized mice. We found gene expression and signaling pathway alterations related to synaptic dysfunction, inflammation, and extracellular matrix components in SCZ astrocytes, and demyelination in SCZ astrocyte transplanted mice. While Ingenuity Pathway Analysis identified SCZ disease and synaptic transmission pathway changes in SCZ astrocytes, the most consistent findings were related to collagen and cell adhesion associated pathways. Neuronal responses to glutamate and GABA differed between astrocytes from control persons, affected twins, and their unaffected co-twins and were normalized by clozapine treatment. SCZ astrocyte cell transplantation to the mouse forebrain caused gene expression changes in synaptic dysfunction and inflammation pathways of mouse brain cells and resulted in behavioral changes in cognitive and olfactory functions. Differentially expressed transcriptomes and signaling pathways related to synaptic functions, inflammation, and especially collagen and glycoprotein 6 pathways indicate abnormal extracellular matrix composition in the brain as one of the key characteristics in the etiology of SCZ.

Details

ISSN :
10981136
Volume :
70
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Glia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....26078c3c8ac213f3e87a783329e729e0