Transcriptome-Wide Association Study Reveals Two Genes that Influence Mismatch Negativity

2020 
Mismatch negativity (MMN) is a differential electrophysiological response measuring cortical adaptability to unpredictable stimuli. MMN is consistently attenuated in patients with psychosis. However, the genetics of MMN are uncharted, limiting the validation of MMN as a psychosis endophenotype. We therefore performed a transcriptome-wide association study of 728 individuals, which revealed two genes (FAM89A and ENGASE) whose expression in cortical tissues is associated with MMN. Enrichment analyses of neurodevelopmental expression signatures showed that genes associated with MMN tend to be overexpressed in frontal cortex during prenatal development but significantly downregulated in adulthood. In our Endophenotype Ranking Value calculation comparing MMN and three other candidate psychosis endophenotypes (lateral ventricular volume and two auditory-verbal learning measures), MMN was considerably superior. These results yield promising insights into sensory processing in the cortex and endorse the notion of MMN as a psychosis endophenotype.
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