Associations of psychiatric disease and ageing with FKBP5 expression converge on superficial layer neurons of the neocortex

Author:

Matosin NatalieORCID,Arloth Janine,Czamara Darina,Edmond Katrina Z.,Maitra Malosree,Fröhlich Anna S.,Martinelli Silvia,Kaul Dominic,Bartlett Rachael,Curry Amber R.,Gassen Nils C.,Hafner Kathrin,Müller Nikola S.,Worf Karolina,Rehawi Ghalia,Nagy Corina,Halldorsdottir Thorhildur,Cruceanu Cristiana,Gagliardi Miriam,Gerstner Nathalie,Ködel Maik,Murek Vanessa,Ziller Michael J.,Scarr Elizabeth,Tao Ran,Jaffe Andrew E.,Arzberger Thomas,Falkai Peter,Kleinmann Joel E.,Weinberger Daniel R.,Mechawar Naguib,Schmitt Andrea,Dean Brian,Turecki Gustavo,Hyde Thomas M.,Binder Elisabeth B.

Abstract

AbstractIdentification and characterisation of novel targets for treatment is a priority in the field of psychiatry. FKBP5 is a gene with decades of evidence suggesting its pathogenic role in a subset of psychiatric patients, with potential to be leveraged as a therapeutic target for these individuals. While it is widely reported that FKBP5/FKBP51 mRNA/protein (FKBP5/1) expression is impacted by psychiatric disease state, risk genotype and age, it is not known in which cell types and sub-anatomical areas of the human brain this occurs. This knowledge is critical to propel FKBP5/1-targeted treatment development. Here, we performed an extensive, large-scale postmortem study (n = 1024) of FKBP5/1, examining neocortical areas (BA9, BA11 and ventral BA24/BA24a) derived from subjects that lived with schizophrenia, major depression or bipolar disorder. With an extensive battery of RNA (bulk RNA sequencing, single-nucleus RNA sequencing, microarray, qPCR, RNAscope) and protein (immunoblot, immunohistochemistry) analysis approaches, we thoroughly investigated the effects of disease state, ageing and genotype on cortical FKBP5/1 expression including in a cell type-specific manner. We identified consistently heightened FKBP5/1 levels in psychopathology and with age, but not genotype, with these effects strongest in schizophrenia. Using single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNAseq; BA9 and BA11) and targeted histology (BA9, BA24a), we established that these disease and ageing effects on FKBP5/1 expression were most pronounced in excitatory superficial layer neurons of the neocortex, and this effect appeared to be consistent in both the granular and agranular areas examined. We then found that this increase in FKBP5 levels may impact on synaptic plasticity, as FKBP5 gex levels strongly and inversely correlated with dendritic mushroom spine density and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in superficial layer neurons in BA11. These findings pinpoint a novel cellular and molecular mechanism that has potential to open a new avenue of FKBP51 drug development to treat cognitive symptoms in psychiatric disorders.

Funder

Rebecca L. Cooper Medical Research Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

International Brain Research Organization

National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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