Copy number variant risk loci for schizophrenia converge on the BDNF pathway

World J Biol Psychiatry. 2024 Apr;25(4):222-232. doi: 10.1080/15622975.2024.2327027. Epub 2024 May 1.

Abstract

Objectives: Schizophrenia genetics is intricate, with common and rare variants' contributions not fully understood. Certain copy number variations (CNVs) elevate risk, pivotal for understanding mental disorder models. Despite CNVs' genome-wide distribution and variable gene and protein effects, we must explore beyond affected genes to interaction partners and molecular pathways.

Methods: In this study, we developed machine-readable interactive pathways to enable analysis of functional effects of genes within CNV loci and identify ten common pathways across CNVs with high schizophrenia risk using the WikiPathways database, schizophrenia risk gene collections from GWAS studies, and a gene-disease association database.

Results: For CNVs that are pathogenic for schizophrenia, we found overlapping pathways, including BDNF signalling, cytoskeleton, and inflammation. Common schizophrenia risk genes identified by different studies are found in all CNV pathways, but not enriched.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that specific pathways - BDNF signalling - are critical contributors to schizophrenia risk conferred by rare CNVs. Our approach highlights the importance of not only investigating deleted or duplicated genes within pathogenic CNV loci, but also study their direct interaction partners, which may explain pleiotropic effects of CNVs on schizophrenia risk and offer a broader field for interventions.

Keywords: Brain-derivedneurotrophic factor (BDNF); Functional genetics; Schizophrenia; copy number variations; molecular pathways.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor* / genetics
  • DNA Copy Number Variations*
  • Genetic Predisposition to Disease*
  • Genome-Wide Association Study*
  • Humans
  • Schizophrenia* / genetics
  • Signal Transduction / genetics

Substances

  • Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor
  • BDNF protein, human