Schizophrenia-associated changes in neuronal subpopulations in the human midbrain

Using single-nucleus transcriptional profiling, Alsema et al. identify differences in the relative abundance of various neuronal populations in the ventral midbrain in individuals with and without schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia-associated changes in neuronal subpopulations in the human midbrain

In the midbrains of individuals with schizophrenia, we observed potential differences in the proportions of two (sub)populations of excitatory neurons, two subpopulations of inhibitory neurons, one “mixed” subpopulation, and one subpopulation of TH -expressing neurons.

We detected 99 genes differentially expressed in schizophrenia compared to controls within neuronal subpopulations identified from the 2 “mixed” populations, with the majority (67) of changes within small GABAergic neuronal subpopulations. Overall, single-nucleus transcriptomic analyses profiled a high diversity of GABAergic neurons in the human ventral midbrain, identified putative shifts in the proportion of neuronal subpopulations, and suggested dysfunction of specific GABAergic subpopulations in schizophrenia, providing directions for future research.