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A single-cell atlas of the human substantia nigra reveals cell-specific pathways associated with neurological disorders

Devika Agarwal, Cynthia Sandor, Viola Volpato, Tara M. Caffrey, Jimena Monzón‐Sandoval, Rory Bowden, Javier Alegre‐Abarrategui, Richard Wade‐Martins, Caleb Webber

2020Nature Communications357 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We describe a human single-nuclei transcriptomic atlas for the substantia nigra (SN), generated by sequencing approximately 17,000 nuclei from matched cortical and SN samples. We show that the common genetic risk for Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with dopaminergic neuron (DaN)-specific gene expression, including mitochondrial functioning, protein folding and ubiquitination pathways. We identify a distinct cell type association between PD risk and oligodendrocyte-specific gene expression. Unlike Alzheimer's disease (AD), we find no association between PD risk and microglia or astrocytes, suggesting that neuroinflammation plays a less causal role in PD than AD. Beyond PD, we find associations between SN DaNs and GABAergic neuron gene expression and multiple neuropsychiatric disorders. Conditional analysis reveals that distinct neuropsychiatric disorders associate with distinct sets of neuron-specific genes but converge onto shared loci within oligodendrocytes and oligodendrocyte precursors. This atlas guides our aetiological understanding by associating SN cell type expression profiles with specific disease risk.

Topics & Concepts

Substantia nigraOligodendrocyteBiologyNeuroscienceTranscriptomeNeuroinflammationParkinson's diseaseGenome-wide association studyHuman brainMicrogliaCell typeWhite matterGene expressionGeneticsGeneDiseaseDopaminergicCellDopamineMedicinePathologyImmunologyCentral nervous systemSingle-nucleotide polymorphismMyelinInflammationRadiologyMagnetic resonance imagingGenotypeNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments