Network-based drug repurposing for psychiatric disorders using single-cell genomics

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Abstract

Neuropsychiatric disorders lack effective treatments due to a limited understanding of the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms. To address this, we integrated population-scale single-cell genomics data and analyzed 23 cell-type-level gene regulatory networks across schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and autism. Our analysis revealed potential druggable transcription factors co-regulating known risk genes that converge into cell-type-specific co-regulated modules. We applied graph neural networks on those modules to prioritize novel risk genes and leveraged them in a network-based drug repurposing framework to identify 220 drug molecules with the potential for targeting specific cell types. We found evidence for 37 of these drugs in reversing disorder-associated transcriptional phenotypes. Additionally, we discovered 335 drug-cell quantitative trait loci (eQTLs), revealing genetic variation’s influence on drug target expression at the cell-type level. Our results provide a single-cell network medicine resource that provides potential mechanistic insights for advancing treatment options for neuropsychiatric disorders.

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APA

Gupta, C., Kalafut, N. C., Clarke, D., Choi, J. J., Arachchilage, K. H., Khullar, S., … Wang, D. (2025). Network-based drug repurposing for psychiatric disorders using single-cell genomics. Cell Genomics, 5(11). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xgen.2025.101003

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