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Mol Psychiatry
Published

Familial t(1;11) translocation is associated with disruption of white matter structural integrity and oligodendrocyte-myelin dysfunction.

Authors

Navneet A Vasistha, Mandy Johnstone, Samantha K Barton, Steffen E Mayerl, Bhuvaneish Thangaraj Selvaraj, Pippa A Thomson, Owen Dando, Ellen Grünewald, Clara Alloza, Mark E Bastin, Matthew R Livesey, Kyriakos Economides, Dario Magnani, Paraskevi Makedonopolou, Karen Burr, David J Story, Douglas H R Blackwood, David J A Wyllie, Andrew M McIntosh, J Kirsty Millar, Charles Ffrench-Constant, Giles E Hardingham, Stephen M Lawrie, Siddharthan Chandran

Abstract

Although the underlying neurobiology of major mental illness (MMI) remains unknown, emerging evidence implicates a role for oligodendrocyte-myelin abnormalities. Here, we took advantage of a large family carrying a balanced t(1;11) translocation, which substantially increases risk of MMI, to undertake both diffusion tensor imaging and cellular studies to evaluate the consequences of the t(1;11) translocation on white matter structural integrity and oligodendrocyte-myelin biology. This translocation disrupts among others the DISC1 gene which plays a crucial role in brain development. We show that translocation-carrying patients display significant disruption of  white matter integrity compared with familial controls. At a cellular level, we observe dysregulation of key pathways controlling oligodendrocyte development and morphogenesis in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) derived case oligodendrocytes. This is associated with reduced proliferation and a stunted morphology in vitro. Further, myelin internodes in a humanized mouse model that recapitulates the human translocation as well as after transplantation of t(1;11) oligodendrocyte progenitors were significantly reduced when  compared with controls. Thus we provide evidence that the t(1;11) translocation has biological effects at both the systems and cellular level that together suggest oligodendrocyte-myelin dysfunction.

PMID:31481758 | DOI:

UK DRI Authors

Siddharthan Chandran

Prof Siddharthan Chandran

Director & CEO

Dissecting a genetic cause of ALS and FTD and identifying ways to help protect neurons

Prof Siddharthan Chandran