Translational Psychiatry (Jan 2025)

Systematic dissection of pleiotropic loci and critical regulons in excitatory neurons and microglia relevant to neuropsychiatric and ocular diseases

  • Yunlong Ma,
  • Dingping Jiang,
  • Jingjing Li,
  • Gongwei Zheng,
  • Yao Deng,
  • Xuanxuan Gou,
  • Shuaishuai Gao,
  • Cheng Chen,
  • Yijun Zhou,
  • Yaru Zhang,
  • Chunyu Deng,
  • Yinghao Yao,
  • Haijun Han,
  • Jianzhong Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-025-03243-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Advancements in single-cell multimodal techniques have greatly enhanced our understanding of disease-relevant loci identified through genome-wide association studies (GWASs). To investigate the biological connections between the eye and brain, we integrated bulk and single-cell multiomic profiles with GWAS summary statistics for eight neuropsychiatric and five ocular diseases. Our analysis uncovered five latent factors explaining 61.7% of the genetic variance across these 13 diseases, revealing diverse correlational patterns among them. We identified 45 pleiotropic loci with 91 candidate genes that contribute to disease risk. By integrating GWAS and single-cell profiles, we implicated excitatory neurons and microglia as key contributors in the eye-brain connections. Polygenic enrichment analysis further identified 15 pleiotropic regulons in excitatory neurons and 16 in microglia that were linked to comorbid conditions. Functionally, excitatory neuron-specific regulons were involved in axon guidance and synaptic activity, while microglia-specific regulons were associated with immune response and cell activation. In sum, these findings underscore the genetic link between psychiatric disorders and ocular diseases.