Integrative genetic analysis of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis spinal cord implicates glial activation and suggests new risk genes
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Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressively fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. We used 380 post-mortem tissue RNA-seq transcriptomes from 154 ALS cases and 49 control individuals from cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spinal cord segments to investigate the gene expression response to ALS. We observed an increase in microglia and astrocyte expression, accompanied by a decrease in oligodendrocytes. By creating a gene co-expression network in the ALS samples, we identify several activated microglia modules that negatively correlate with retrospective disease duration. We map molecular quantitative trait loci and find several potential ALS risk loci that may act through gene expression or splicing in the spinal cord and assign putative cell-types for FNBP1, ACSL5, SH3RF1 and NFASC . Finally, we outline how repeat expansions that alter splicing of C9orf72 are tagged by common variants, and use this to suggest ATXN3 as a putative risk gene.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00