Single-cell deconvolution of 3,000 post-mortem brain samples for eQTL and GWAS dissection in mental disorders

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Single-cell deconvolution of 3,000 post-mortem brain samples for eQTL and GWAS dissection in mental disorders

TitleSingle-cell deconvolution of 3,000 post-mortem brain samples for eQTL and GWAS dissection in mental disorders
Publication TypeUnpublished
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsPark, Y, He, L, Davila-Velderrain, J, Hou, L, Mohammadi, S, Mathys, H, Peng, Z, Bennett, D, Tsai, L-H, Kellis, M
Series TitleCold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Pagination2021.01.21.426000
Keywords1 CRS 2021, My Papers
AbstractThousands of genetic variants acting in multiple cell types underlie complex disorders, yet most gene expression studies profile only bulk tissues, making it hard to resolve where genetic and non-genetic contributors act. This is particularly important for psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders that impact multiple brain cell types with highly-distinct gene expression patterns and proportions. To address this challenge, we develop a new framework, SPLITR, that integrates single-nucleus and bulk RNA-seq data, enabling phenotype-aware deconvolution and correcting for systematic discrepancies between bulk and single-cell data. We deconvolved 3,387 post-mortem brain samples across 1,127 individuals and in multiple brain regions. We find that cell proportion varies across brain regions, individuals, disease status, and genotype, including genetic variants in TMEM106B that impact inhibitory neuron fraction and 4,757 cell-type-specific eQTLs. Our results demonstrate the power of jointly analyzing bulk and single-cell RNA-seq to provide insights into cell-type-specific mechanisms for complex brain disorders. \#\#\# Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.