AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the relationship between gene expression and neural connectivity in the rodent brain, using data from both rat and mouse species.
  • Despite using data from different species, the research reveals that approximately 73% of outgoing and 56% of incoming brain region connections can be predicted from gene expression levels with significant accuracy (0.79 for outgoing, 0.83 for incoming connectivity).
  • Notably, many of the identified genes correlate with known brain disorders, such as schizophrenia and autism, and show similarities in connectivity patterns when compared to gene networks in the C. elegans model organism.

Article Abstract

The putative link between gene expression of brain regions and their neural connectivity patterns is a fundamental question in neuroscience. Here this question is addressed in the first large scale study of a prototypical mammalian rodent brain, using a combination of rat brain regional connectivity data with gene expression of the mouse brain. Remarkably, even though this study uses data from two different rodent species (due to the data limitations), we still find that the connectivity of the majority of brain regions is highly predictable from their gene expression levels-the outgoing (incoming) connectivity is successfully predicted for 73% (56%) of brain regions, with an overall fairly marked accuracy level of 0.79 (0.83). Many genes are found to play a part in predicting both the incoming and outgoing connectivity (241 out of the 500 top selected genes, p-value<1e-5). Reassuringly, the genes previously known from the literature to be involved in axon guidance do carry significant information about regional brain connectivity. Surveying the genes known to be associated with the pathogenesis of several brain disorders, we find that those associated with schizophrenia, autism and attention deficit disorder are the most highly enriched in the connectivity-related genes identified here. Finally, we find that the profile of functional annotation groups that are associated with regional connectivity in the rodent is significantly correlated with the annotation profile of genes previously found to determine neural connectivity in C. elegans (Pearson correlation of 0.24, p<1e-6 for the outgoing connections and 0.27, p<1e-5 for the incoming). Overall, the association between connectivity and gene expression in a specific extant rodent species' brain is likely to be even stronger than found here, given the limitations of current data.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3088660PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002040DOI Listing

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