MiR-137-derived polygenic risk: effects on cognitive performance in patients with schizophrenia and controls
2017
Variants at microRNA-137 (MIR137), one of the most strongly associated schizophrenia risk loci identified to date, have been
associated with poorer cognitive performance. As microRNA-137 is known to regulate the expression of ~ 1900 other genes,
including several that are independently associated with schizophrenia, we tested whether this gene set was also associated with
variation in cognitive performance. Our analysis was based on an empirically derived list of genes whose expression was altered by
manipulation of MIR137 expression. This list was cross-referenced with genome-wide schizophrenia association data to construct
individual polygenic scores. We then tested, in a sample of 808 patients and 192 controls, whether these risk scores were associated
with altered performance on cognitive functions known to be affected in schizophrenia. A subgroup of healthy participants also
underwent functional imaging during memory (n = 108) and face processing tasks (n = 83). Increased polygenic risk within the
empirically derived miR-137 regulated gene score was associated with significantly lower performance on intelligence quotient,
working memory and episodic memory. These effects were observed most clearly at a polygenic threshold of P = 0.05, although
significant results were observed at all three thresholds analyzed. This association was found independently for the gene set as a
whole, excluding the schizophrenia-associated MIR137 SNP itself. Analysis of the spatial working memory fMRI task further
suggested that increased risk score (thresholded at P=10− 5) was significantly associated with increased activation of the right
inferior occipital gyrus. In conclusion, these data are consistent with emerging evidence that MIR137 associated risk for
schizophrenia may relate to its broader downstream genetic effects.
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