| Literature DB >> 23697635 |
Tewarit Sarachana1, Valerie W Hu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We have recently identified the nuclear hormone receptor RORA (retinoic acid-related orphan receptor-alpha) as a novel candidate gene for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Our independent cohort studies have consistently demonstrated the reduction of RORA transcript and/or protein levels in blood-derived lymphoblasts as well as in the postmortem prefrontal cortex and cerebellum of individuals with ASD. Moreover, we have also shown that RORA has the potential to be under negative and positive regulation by androgen and estrogen, respectively, suggesting the possibility that RORA may contribute to the male bias of ASD. However, little is known about transcriptional targets of this nuclear receptor, particularly in humans.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23697635 PMCID: PMC3665583 DOI: 10.1186/2040-2392-4-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Top annotation cluster from gene ontology analysis of 2,544 potential transcriptional targets of RORA
| GO:0030182-neuron differentiation | 35 | 1.52E-08 | 3.56E-05 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, PAX3, RORA, RTN1, EPHB2, ARX, ATP2B2, BDNF, SLC1A3, LAMB2, CD44, CXCR4, ANK3, DMD, ROBO3, LHX8, LMX1B, MDGA2, PTPRR, NTNG1, RPGRIP1, NUMBL, SOD2, PTPN11, CTNNA2, SLITRK1, NTRK1, NTRK2, FOXG1, CNTN4, CACNA1F, CUX1, NTM |
| GO:0048666-neuron development | 28 | 2.96E-07 | 3.48E-04 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, EPHB2, ARX, ATP2B2, BDNF, SLC1A3, LAMB2, CD44, ANK3, CXCR4, DMD, ROBO3, LHX8, LMX1B, NTNG1, RPGRIP1, CTNNA2, PTPN11, SOD2, NUMBL, SLITRK1, FOXG1, NTRK2, CNTN4, CACNA1F, NTM |
| GO:0000904-cell morphogenesis involved in differentiation | 22 | 1.86E-06 | 1.45E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, ATP2B2, DAB2, BDNF, SLC1A3, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, LAMA5, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F, FN1 |
| GO:0000902-cell morphogenesis | 27 | 2.53E-06 | 1.48E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, EPHB2, ARX, ATP2B2, BDNF, DAB2, SLC1A3, LAMB2, ANK3, CXCR4, DMD, MKKS, ROBO3, FN1, NTNG1, MARK2, CTNNA2, PTPN11, NUMBL, SLITRK1, LAMA5, FOXG1, CNTN4, CACNA1F, CDC42BPB |
| GO:0032989-cellular component morphogenesis | 28 | 6.15E-06 | 2.88E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, EPHB2, ARX, ATP2B2, DAB2, BDNF, SLC1A3, LAMB2, ANK3, CXCR4, DMD, OBSL1, MKKS, ROBO3, FN1, NTNG1, MARK2, CTNNA2, PTPN11, NUMBL, SLITRK1, LAMA5, FOXG1, CNTN4, CACNA1F, CDC42BPB |
| GO:0048858-cell projection morphogenesis | 21 | 7.30E-06 | 2.14E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, BDNF, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, LAMA5, DMD, FOXG1, MKKS, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0048667-cell morphogenesis involved in neuron differentiation | 19 | 1.01E-05 | 2.63E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, ATP2B2, BDNF, SLC1A3, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0048812-neuron projection morphogenesis | 19 | 1.31E-05 | 3.07E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, BDNF, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, DMD, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0030030-cell projection organization | 26 | 1.39E-05 | 2.96E-03 | MTSS1, RAB3A, CDK5R1, DNAH9, ADORA2A, EPHB2, ARX, ATP2B2, BDNF, LAMB2, CD44, ANK3, CXCR4, DMD, MKKS, ROBO3, FGD3, NTNG1, CTNNA2, PTPN11, NUMBL, SLITRK1, LAMA5, FOXG1, CNTN4, CACNA1F |
| GO:0032990-cell part morphogenesis | 21 | 1.40E-05 | 2.73E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, BDNF, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, LAMA5, DMD, FOXG1, MKKS, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0031175-neuron projection development | 20 | 4.65E-05 | 6.80E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, ADORA2A, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, BDNF, LAMB2, CD44, CXCR4, ANK3, DMD, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0007409-axonogenesis | 17 | 4.98E-05 | 6.86E-03 | RAB3A, CDK5R1, NTNG1, PTPN11, CTNNA2, EPHB2, NUMBL, ARX, SLITRK1, BDNF, LAMB2, CXCR4, ANK3, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, CACNA1F |
| GO:0007411-axon guidance | 9 | 7.12E-03 | 2.67E-01 | ARX, CDK5R1, BDNF, CXCR4, ANK3, FOXG1, CNTN4, ROBO3, EPHB2 |
Results were obtained using DAVID Bioinformatics Resources 6.7. The enrichment score is the negative logarithm of the average of P values for items within each cluster. *P values corrected for multiple testing.
Top five biological functions, disorders, and canonical pathways associated with 2,544 potential transcriptional targets of RORA
| | | |
| Organismal survival | 3.56E-08 to 6.82E-04 | 305 |
| Nervous system development and function | 5.83E-08 to 4.28E-03 | 344 |
| Tissue morphology | 5.83E-08 to 4.72E-03 | 419 |
| Cardiovascular system development and function | 8.89E-08 to 4.72E-03 | 268 |
| Embryonic development | 9.01E-08 to 4.72E-03 | 370 |
| | | |
| Hereditary disorder | 8.09E-06 to 1.56E-03 | 204 |
| Neurological disease | 8.09E-06 to 4.72E-03 | 292 |
| Psychological disorders | 8.09E-06 to 8.09E-06 | 107 |
| Cancer | 1.65E-05 to 4.77E-03 | 731 |
| Hematological disease | 1.65E-05 to 4.67E-03 | 166 |
| | ||
| Superpathway of inositol phosphate compounds | 4.97E-04 | 37/227 |
| Production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species in macrophages | 1.29E-03 | 35/210 |
| Axonal guidance signaling | 2.47E-03 | 69/468 |
| 3-phosphoinositide biosynthesis | 2.52E-03 | 29/175 |
| Small cell lung cancer signaling | 2.60E-03 | 17/89 |
These data were obtained using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software. P values were calculated using Fisher's exact test, which was performed using the entire set of genes within the Ingenuity Knowledge Base as the reference set.
Top neurological diseases, disorders, and behaviors associated with the 2,544 potential transcriptional targets of RORA
| | |
| Quantity of neurons (67) | 5.83E-08 |
| Development of brain (102) | 9.01E-08 |
| Morphology of nervous system (161) | 3.96E-07 |
| Morphology of nervous tissue (118) | 5.44E-07 |
| Development of central nervous system (122) | 1.50E-06 |
| Axonogenesis (43) | 1.68E-05 |
| Morphology of nerves (30) | 7.32E-05 |
| Cell-cell adhesion of neurons (6) | 1.48E-04 |
| Morphology of central nervous system (98) | 1.90E-04 |
| Morphology of rhombencephalon (35) | 2.41E-04 |
| Quantity of sensory neurons (19) | 2.81E-04 |
| Development of nerves (19) | 2.81E-04 |
| Abnormal morphology of neurons (51) | 2.85E-04 |
| Morphology of neurons (55) | 3.37E-04 |
| Antinociception (13) | 3.84E-04 |
| Development of neurons (37) | 3.98E-04 |
| Morphology of brain (88) | 4.40E-04 |
| Development of interneurons (7) | 4.56E-04 |
| Migration of neurons (46) | 4.79E-04 |
| Abnormal morphology of cerebellum (21) | 5.58E-04 |
| Development of metencephalon (24) | 5.88E-04 |
| Loss of neurons (29) | 8.01E-04 |
| Long-term potentiation of granule cells (4) | 8.18E-04 |
| Abnormal morphology of cranial nerve (19) | 8.60E-04 |
| Neuritogenesis (83) | 1.11E-03 |
| Development of cerebellum (23) | 1.22E-03 |
| Development of forebrain (45) | 1.26E-03 |
| Fasciculation of nervous tissue (9) | 1.34E-03 |
| Abnormal morphology of granule cells (12) | 1.42E-03 |
| Development of globus pallidus (3) | 1.56E-03 |
| Activation of hippocampus (3) | 1.56E-03 |
| Abnormal morphology of hair cells (9) | 1.84E-03 |
| Morphogenesis of neurites (58) | 1.85E-03 |
| Adhesion of neuronal cells (14) | 1.88E-03 |
| Abnormal morphology of outer hair cells (6) | 2.01E-03 |
| Sensory system development (23) | 2.09E-03 |
| Development of rhombencephalon (28) | 2.15E-03 |
| Chemotaxis of granule cells (4) | 2.23E-03 |
| Guidance of axons (31) | 2.24E-03 |
| Morphology of mechanosensory neurons (10) | 2.49E-03 |
| Cell viability of neurons (39) | 2.51E-03 |
| Analgesia (18) | 2.62E-03 |
| Synaptic transmission of cerebral cortex cells (11) | 3.03E-03 |
| Memory (39) | 3.52E-03 |
| Neurotransmission (71) | 3.75E-03 |
| Development of cranial nerve (11) | 3.79E-03 |
| Cell viability of granule cells (8) | 4.28E-03 |
| | |
| Schizophrenia (107) | 8.09E-06 |
| Chorea (117) | 3.23E-04 |
| Huntington's Disease (116) | 4.09E-04 |
| Movement Disorders (183) | 9.11E-04 |
| Dyskinesia (118) | 1.27E-03 |
| Neurological signs (120) | 1.45E-03 |
| Familial transthyretin amyloidosis (3) | 1.56E-03 |
| Seizure disorder (60) | 3.92E-03 |
| Disorder of basal ganglia (135) | 4.31E-03 |
| Polymicrogyria (4) | 4.72E-03 |
| | |
| Behavior (180) | 2.74E-07 |
| Cognition (79) | 1.70E-05 |
| Learning (74) | 3.41E-05 |
| Circling behavior (12) | 1.11E-03 |
| Emotional behavior (42) | 3.04E-03 |
| Memory (39) | 3.52E-03 |
| Spatial learning (33) | 4.23E-03 |
These data were obtained using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software. P values were calculated using Fisher's exact test, which was performed using the entire set of genes within the Ingenuity Knowledge Base as the reference set.
Hypergeometric distribution analysis results to determine enrichment of autism candidate genes from AutDB and AutismKB
| AutDB (SFARI gene) | 328 | 25,500 | 2,544 | 49 | 0.0028 |
| AutismKB (syndromic + non-syndromic) | 3,050 | 25,500 | 2,544 | 426 | <0.001 |
| AutDB + AutismKB | 3,158 | 25,500 | 2,544 | 438 | <0.001 |
For the hypergeometric distribution analyses, the total number of general markers (that is, the population) is the number of genes (25,500) whose promoter regions are represented on the array, and the total number of selected markers is the number of unique genes (2,544) identified as targets of RORA by the ChIP-on-chip analysis. The total interesting markers are the number of autism candidate genes in the respective or combined databases, and the number of selected interesting markers are the genes within our dataset that overlap with those in either or the combined databases.
Enrichment data and genomic location of the RORA-binding enriched regions closest to the selected genes
| Inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor, type 1 | 17.19 | 0.005 | <5 | 1.29 | chr3 (+) | 4,724,792 | 2,804 | 71 | |
| Hydroxysteroid (17-β) dehydrogenase 10 | 14.11 | 0.007 | <5 | 11.86 | chrX (−) | 53,483,92 | 1,723 | 42 | |
| RNA binding protein, fox-1 homolog | 12.86 | 0.009 | <5 | 1.29 | chr16 (+) | 7,315,418 | 2,636 | 68 | |
| Neuroligin 1 | 7.30 | 0.036 | <5 | 3.27 | chr3 (+) | 174,777,672 | 639 | 18 | |
| Cytochrome P450, family 19, subfamily A, polypeptide 1 | 7.02 | 0.040 | <5 | 1.61 | chr15 (−) | 49,415,636 | 2,111 | 54 | |
| Neurotrophic tyrosine kinase, receptor, type 2 | 6.72 | 0.044 | <7 | 2.17 | chr9 (+) | 86,412,498 | 966 | 21 |
FDR false discovery rate, G intensity of probes hybridized with DNA fragments immunoprecipitated with nonspecific IgG, MAT model-based analysis of tiling arrays, R intensity of probes hybridized with DNA fragments immunoprecipitated with anti-RORA antibody, T t-statistic.
Figure 1Pathway analysis of selected potential transcriptional targets of RORA. A biological network was created using the Pathway Studio 7.0 program to identify biological functions and disorders associated with potential RORA transcriptional targets selected for confirmation (that is, ITPR1, CYP19A1, A2BP1, HSD17B10, NLGN1, and NTRK2 which are highlighted with a blue halo).
Figure 2Chromatin immunoprecipitation-quantitative PCR of RORA transcriptional targets. Chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by quantitative PCR analysis was conducted to determine whether RORA protein binds to A2BP1, CYP19A1, HSD17B10, ITPR1, NLGN1, and NTRK2 promoters. Chromatin was isolated from SH-SY5Y cells and immunoprecipitated with anti-RORA1 or IgG antibody. DNA was purified from the immunoprecipitated chromatin and quantitative real-time PCR analysis (n = 3) was performed to determine the enrichment of each RORA binding element in the promoter region of the selected potential RORA targets. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. * P <0.05; ** P <0.01; #undetectable.
Figure 3Quantitative RT-PCR analysis of RORA short hairpin RNA-transfected SH-SY5Y cells. SH-SY5Y cells were transfected with RORA1 short hairpin RNA (shRNA) or negative control shRNA for 24 hours and quantitative RT-PCR analysis (n = 3) was performed to determine expression of RORA1 and potential transcriptional targets in the transfected cells. GAPDH was included as a negative control. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. *P <0.05, **P <0.01.
Quantitative RT-PCR analysis of post-mortem brain tissues from individuals with autism
| 5144A vs. 5251C | 20, 19 | 6.4 | 2.0 | 0.316 | 1.7E-04 | 5.2E-05 | 0.307 | 127.7 | 70.8 | 0.554 | 553.1 | 105.3 | 0.190 |
| 5173A vs. 5873C | 30, 28 | 38.4 | 25.4 | 0.661 | 1.2E-02 | 5.9E-03 | 0.487 | 246.4 | 27.3 | 0.111 | 830.1 | 74.2 | 0.089 |
| 6337A vs. 5718C | 22, 22 | 7.9 | 0.4 | 0.046 | 7.7E-06 | 1.0E-07 | 0.013 | 217.4 | 176.3 | 0.811 | 246.0 | 64.6 | 0.263 |
| Average ratio (A/C) | 17.6 | 9.3 | 4.1E-03 | 2.0E-03 | 197.2 | 91.5 | 543.1 | 81.4 | |||||
| | | 0.562 | | | 0.660 | | | 0.137 | | | 0.052 | ||
| | | | | | |||||||||
| | | | |||||||||||
| 5144A vs. 5251C | 20, 19 | 128.7 | 15.7 | 0.122 | 178.3 | 23.8 | 0.133 | 3218.9 | 544.6 | 0.169 | | | |
| 5173A vs. 5873C | 30, 28 | 126.3 | 41.1 | 0.325 | 255.3 | 44.9 | 0.176 | 2600.1 | 1077.2 | 0.414 | | | |
| 6337A vs. 5718C | 22, 22 | 47.6 | 39.2 | 0.824 | 84.8 | 61.5 | 0.725 | 929.8 | 1265.1 | 1.361 | | | |
| Average ratio (A/C) | 100.9 | 32.0 | 172.8 | 43.4 | 2249.6 | 962.3 | | | | ||||
| 0.069 | 0.062 | 0.147 | |||||||||||
Gene expression in brain tissues from individuals with autism (indicated by ’A’) was compared with that in controls (indicated by ’C’). The numbers preceding ‘A’ or ‘C’ identify specific individuals whose brains were donated to the Autism Tissue Program (San Diego, CA, USA). Total RNA was isolated and purified from frozen post-mortem prefrontal cortex tissues from individuals with autism (n = 3) and the controls (n = 3). Quantitative RT-PCR analyses (in triplicate) were performed to measure expression of RORA and that of six transcriptional targets. The transcript levels of each gene were calculated using standard curves obtained from relative 18S expression in 10-fold serial dilutions of each sample. The numbers highlighted in bold-face type indicate down-regulation of gene expression in autism brain tissues relative to that in respective matched controls. The P values are from unpaired t tests of the expression data from the combined cases versus that of the combined controls.
Figure 4Possible downstream consequences of deregulation of the six confirmed transcriptional targets of RORA. This figure summarizes findings from this study. ChIP, chromatin immunoprecipitation; qPCR, quantitative PCR.