Identification and Functional Studies of Regulatory Variants Responsible for the Association of NRG3 with a Delusion Phenotype in Schizophrenia

We previously reported a genetic linkage for schizophrenia (SZ; nonparametric linkage score of 4.27) at 10q22 in an Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population. In follow-up fine-mapping, we found strong evidence for an association between 3 intronic single nucleotide variants (SNVs) in the 5′ end of neuregulin 3 (NRG3) and the delusion factor score of our phenotypic principal component analysis. Two independent groups replicated these findings, indicating that variants in NRG3 confer a risk for a delusion-rich SZ subtype. To identify the causative variants, we sequenced the 162-kb linkage disequilibrium block covering the NRG3 5′ end in 47 AJ SZ patients at the extremes of the delusion factor quantitative trait distribution. Among the identified variants, we found 5 noncoding SNVs which were present on the high delusion factor haplotype and significantly overrepresented in high delusion factor subjects. We tested these for regulatory effects and found that risk alleles of rs10883866 and rs60827755 decreased and increased, respectively, the expression of a reporter gene as compared to the reference allele. In postmortem brain mRNA quantification experiments, we found the same variants also perturb the relative expression of alternative NRG3 isoforms. In summary, we have identified regulatory SNVs contributing to the association of NRG3 with delusion symptoms in SZ.Mol Neuropsychiatry 2015;1:36-46
Source: Molecular Neuropsychiatry - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research