| Literature DB >> 22832905 |
R Das Chakraborty1, D Chakraborty, A J Bernal, K Schoch, T D Howard, E H Ip, S R Hooper, M S Keshavan, R L Jirtle, V Shashi.
Abstract
Chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS) is the most common microdeletion syndrome in humans. It is typified by highly variable symptoms, which might be explained by epigenetic regulation of genes in the interval. Using computational algorithms, our laboratory previously predicted that DiGeorge critical region 6 (DGCR6), which lies within the deletion interval, is imprinted in humans. Expression and epigenetic regulation of this gene have not, however, been examined in 22q11DS subjects. The purpose of this study was to determine if the expression levels of DGCR6 and its duplicate copy DGCR6L in 22q11DS subjects are associated with the parent-of-origin of the deletion and childhood psychopathologies. Our investigation showed no evidence of parent-of-origin-related differences in expression of both DGCR6 and DGCR6L. However, we found that the variability in DGCR6 expression was significantly greater in 22q11DS children than in age and gender-matched control individuals. Children with 22q11DS who had anxiety disorders had significantly lower DGCR6 expression, especially in subjects with the deletion on the maternal chromosome, despite the lack of imprinting. Our findings indicate that epigenetic mechanisms other than imprinting contribute to the dysregulation of these genes and the associated childhood psychopathologies observed in individuals with 22q11DS. Further studies are now needed to test the usefulness of DGCR6 and DGCR6L expression and alterations in the epigenome at these loci in predicting childhood anxiety and associated adult-onset pathologies in 22q11DS subjects.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22832905 PMCID: PMC3337078 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2012.31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Figure 1Genomic rearrangements in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS) and the DiGeorge Critical Region (DGCR6)/DGCR6L locus. (a) 22q11DS patients bear a well-defined 3-Mb microdeletion at 22q11.2, mediated by low copy repeats (LCR22s) flanking the breakpoints. (b) The DGCR is a nested 1.5-Mb deletion that exhibits all the characteristic psychological and psychiatric symptoms of the syndrome. (c) Approximately 30 genes lie within the critical region, and some of these that are believed to be implicated in the phenotype are shown, including DGCR6 and its duplicate copy DGCR6L.
Figure 2Relative gene expression of human DiGeorge Critical Region (DGCR6) (a) and DGCR6L (b). The fold expression levels relative to the average mean of the controls are displayed for controls (yellow), 22q11DS subjects with paternal deletions (blue) and 22q11DS subjects with maternal deletions (pink). The average relative expression level of each group is marked with a dashed line.
Relationship between DGCR6 and DGCR6L gene expression and neuropsychological performance in 22q11DS subjects (n=36)
| IQ (WISC)—verbal comprehension | −0.215 | −0.183 |
| IQ—perceptual organization | −0.049 | −0.030 |
| IQ—working memory | 0.12 | 0.2 |
| IQ—processing speed | −0.090 | −0.025 |
| Executive function (WCST)—PE | 0.244 | 0.194 |
| Sustained attention—CPT AX | −0.245 | |
| Sustained attention—CPT IP | −0.271 | −0.288 |
| Parent CBCL internalizing | −0.116 | |
| Anxiety disorders (C-DISC) | F=5.42* | F=0.85 |
*P<0.05.
Moderate and large effect sizes are in bold (small=0.1, medium=0.3 and large=0.5 for Pearson correlations and small=0.10, medium=0.25 and large=0.40 for ANOVA).
Please note that neuropsychological data for correlational analyses were available in 36/38 subjects with 22q11DS.
Pearson's correlations were computed for all variables, except for anxiety disorders, wherein ANOVA was computed, to examine differences in expression of DGCR6 and DGCR6L in those with and without an anxiety disorder.
Relationship between maternally derived deletions in the 22q11DS subjects and neuropsychological performance (data available for 19 subjects with maternally derived deletions)
| IQ (WISC)—verbal comprehension | −0.191 | −0.236 |
| IQ—perceptual organization | −0.120 | −0.185 |
| IQ—working memory | 0.170 | 0.171 |
| IQ—processing speed | −0.184 | −0.228 |
| Executive function (WCST)—PE | 0.183 | 0.251 |
| Sustained attention—CPT AX | ||
| Sustained attention—CPT IP | ||
| Parent CBCL internalizing | ||
| Anxiety disorders | F=5.37* |
*P<0.05.
**P<0.01.
Moderate and large effect sizes are in bold (small=0.1, medium=0.3 and large=0.5 for Pearson's correlations and small=0.10, medium=0.25 and large=0.40 for ANOVA).
Pearson's correlations were computed for all variables, except for anxiety disorders, wherein ANOVA was computed, to examine differences in expression of DGCR6 and DGCR6L in those with and without an anxiety disorder.