Identification of cell type-specific regulatory elements in the human brain enables interpretation of non-coding GWAS risk variants.
AbstractUnique cell type-specific patterns of activated enhancers can be leveraged to interpret non-coding genetic variation associated with complex traits and diseases such as neurological and psychiatric disorders. Here, we have defined active promoters and enhancers for major cell types of the human brain. Whereas psychiatric disorders were primarily associated with regulatory regions in neurons, idiopathic Alzheimer's disease (AD) variants were largely confined to microglia enhancers. Interactome maps connecting GWAS variants in cell type-specific enhancers to gene promoters revealed an extended microglia gene network in AD. Deletion of a microglia-specific enhancer harboring ADrisk variants ablated BIN1 expression in microglia but not in neurons or astrocytes. These findings revise and expand the genes likely to be influenced by non-coding variants in AD and suggest the probable brain cell types in which they function. of neurons, microglia, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and other cell types that reside within the brain (1-4). In contrast, transcriptional mechanisms that control their developmental and functional properties in health and disease remain less well understood. Studies in animal models have provided deep insights into conserved processes, but significant differences between species often limit the translatability of findings in model systems to humans (5).Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) provide a genetic approach to identifying molecular pathways involved in complex traits and diseases by defining associations between genetic variants and phenotypes of interest (6, 7). Large-scale GWASs have discovered hundreds of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are associated with the risk of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The vast majority of disease-risk genetic variants are located in non-coding regions of the genome (7) and the specific cell type (s) in which the disease-risk variants are active is often unclear. Furthermore, linkagedisequilibrium between disease-risk variants at GWAS significant loci complicates the identification of causal variants. Collectively, these limitations have hindered the assignment and interpretation of disease-risk genes.GWAS-identified risk variants that are located in non-coding regions of the genome can exert phenotypic effects through several mechanisms, including perturbation of transcriptional enhancers and promoters (6). While promoters provide the essential sites of transcriptional initiation of mRNAs, they are frequently not sufficient to direct appropriate developmental and signal-dependent levels of gene expression (8,9). This additional information is provided by enhancers, short regions of DNA that, when bound by transcription factors, enhance mRNA expression from target promoters. Enhancers can reside hundreds of thousands of base pairs away from their target gene and their function is generally consid...