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Functional impact of the psychiatric risk gene CACNA1C in human iPSC-derived microglia

Subject Area Experimental Models for the Understanding of Nervous System Diseases
Term since 2022
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 502888321
 
Psychiatric disorders such as major depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and autism are highly prevalent chronic diseases. However, their underlying pathophysiology is still largely unknown. Genomic studies have identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the CACNA1C gene that are robustly associated with all of these major psychoses. Among these is the main non-coding risk SNP rs1006737. Beyond that, a gain-of-function mutation in CACNA1C has been described, which causes a multiorgan phenotype including severe cardiac arrhythmias, immune deficiency, cognitive abnormalities, and autism, named Timothy syndrome (TS). Immune alterations plus the involvement of their primary mediators in the brain, the microglia, have also been reported for psychiatric disorders. Based on this, we aim to introduce the risk A-allele of the CACNA1C SNP rs1006737 as well as the TS mutation G406R into human iPSC control lines using CRISPR base editing. The generated isogenic lines are then differentiated into iPSC-derived microglia cells (iMGs) and undergo a systematic functional characterization, including the analysis of intracellular calcium levels, motility, phagocytic activity, cytokine release, cellular bioenergetics, mitochondrial parameters, and transcriptomic profile. Furthermore, the newly created iMG cultures are tested in co-culture and brain organoid systems to assess their effects on neuronal activity and function via multielectrode array recordings and single nuclei sequencing. The obtained results will contribute significantly to elucidating whether microglial function is causally affected by the selected CACNA1C risk variants, what underlying checkpoint mechanisms are involved, and whether these changes compromise microglia-neuron interactions, thereby impairing neuronal activity and function. Overall, this study will add to a better understanding of the role microglia play in the pathogenesis and/or progression of CACNA1C-associated psychiatric disorders.
DFG Programme WBP Fellowship
International Connection Finland
 
 

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