| Literature DB >> 26733790 |
Rebecca A Barnard1, Matthew B Pomaville2, Brian J O'Roak1.
Abstract
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a common neurodevelopmental disorder with a strong but complex genetic component. Recent family based exome-sequencing strategies have identified recurrent de novo mutations at specific genes, providing strong evidence for ASD risk, but also highlighting the extreme genetic heterogeneity of the disorder. However, disruptions in these genes converge on key molecular pathways early in development. In particular, functional enrichment analyses have found that there is a bias toward genes involved in transcriptional regulation, such as chromatin modifiers. Here we review recent genetic, animal model, co-expression network, and functional genomics studies relating to the high confidence ASD risk gene, CHD8. CHD8, a chromatin remodeling factor, may serve as a "master regulator" of a common ASD etiology. Individuals with a CHD8 mutation show an ASD subtype that includes similar physical characteristics, such as macrocephaly and prolonged GI problems including recurrent constipation. Similarly, animal models of CHD8 disruption exhibit enlarged head circumference and reduced gut motility phenotypes. Systems biology approaches suggest CHD8 and other candidate ASD risk genes are enriched during mid-fetal development, which may represent a critical time window in ASD etiology. Transcription and CHD8 binding site profiles from cell and primary tissue models of early development indicate that CHD8 may also positively regulate other candidate ASD risk genes through both direct and indirect means. However, continued study is needed to elucidate the mechanism of regulation as well as identify which CHD8 targets are most relevant to ASD risk. Overall, these initial studies suggest the potential for common ASD etiologies and the development of personalized treatments in the future.Entities:
Keywords: CHD8; autism; autism spectrum disorder (ASD); co-expression networks; de novo mutations; functional genomics; subtype; systems biology
Year: 2015 PMID: 26733790 PMCID: PMC4681771 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
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| 2,189,9618 | G | C | p.Ser62X | Ns | ASD | 75 | 78 | 74 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,899,168 | C | T | p.Arg212Gln | Ms | ASD | 72 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | ||
| 21,895,989 | del(47) | A | c.1593_1601+38del | Ssv | ASD | SSC | Iossifov et al., | |||
| 21,882,516 | G | T | p.Gln696Lys | Ms | ASD | 88 | 125 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | |
| 21,878,133 | G | GT | p.Tyr747X | Fs | ASD | 25 | 38 | 32 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,876,700 | A | G | p.Leu834Pro | Ms | ASD | ASC | De Rubeis et al., | |||
| 21,876,489 | C | T | p.Met904Ile | Ms | ASD/ID | 63 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | ||
| 21,871,373 | T | C | c.3519-2A>G | Sp | ASD | 37 | 47 | 43 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,871,790 | C | A | p.Glu1114X | Ns | ASD | 27 | 41 | 34 | APP | Bernier et al., |
| 21,871,178 | G | A | p.Gln1238X | Ns | ASD | 20 | 34 | 27 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,870,652 | C | T | p.Arg1242Gln | Ms | ASD | ASC | De Rubeis et al., | |||
| 21,870,169 | G | A | p.Arg1337X | Ns | ASD | 85 | 86 | 84 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,868,219 | G | A | p.Arg1580Trp | Ms | ASD | 97 | 74 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | |
| 21,867,866 | T | G | p.Tyr1642LeufsX25 | Ssv-Fs | ASD | ASC | De Rubeis et al., | |||
| 21,867,866 | T | G | c.4818-2A>C | Ssv | ASD | 93 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | ||
| 21,865,980 | A | T | p.Ser1606ArgfsX8 | Ssv-Fs | ASD | ASC | De Rubeis et al., | |||
| 21,865,980 | A | T | c.5051+2T>A | Ssv | ASD | 96 | 103 | TASC | O'Roak et al., | |
| 21,862,642 | C | T | p.Gly1602ValfsX15 | Ssv-Fs | ASD | ASC | De Rubeis et al., | |||
| 21,862,535 | G | A | p.Arg1834X | Ns | ASD | TASC | O'Roak et al., | |||
| 21,862,159 | CC | C | p.Glu1932SerfsX3 | Fs | DD/ID/ASD | 46 | Troina | Bernier et al., | ||
| 21,861,643 | TCTTC | T | p.Glu2103ArgfsX3 | Fs | ASD | 44 | 67 | 59 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,861,376 | ACT | A | p.Leu2120ProfsX13 | Fs | ASD | 90 | 93 | 91 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| 21,860,919 | C | A | p.Ser2173X | Ns | ASD/SHZ | Mccarthy et al., | ||||
| 21,861,328 | T | TC | p.Glu2136ArgfsX6 | Fs | ID | <40 | Troina | Bernier et al., | ||
| 21,854,022 | GGGT | G | p.His2498del | Aa | ASD | 84 | 98 | 92 | SSC | O'Roak et al., |
| t.3;14,q25.31;q11.2 | Tr | ASD/ID | AGRE | Talkowski et al., |
VCF format, hg19 coordinates.
Accession number: .
Fs, Frameshift; Ns, Nonsense; Tr, Translocation; Aa, Single amino acid deletion; Sp, Splice; Mns, Missense near splice site; Ms, Missense; Ssv, Splice site variant.
ASD, Autism Spectrum Disorder; ID, Intellectual Disability; SHZ, Schizophrenia.
VIQ, Verbal I.Q.
NVIQ, Non Verbal I.Q.
FSIQ, Full Scale I.Q.
SSC, Simons Simplex Collection; AGRE, Autism Research Genome Exchange; ASC, Autism Sequencing Consortium; TASC, The Autism Simplex Collection.
CAAGCTCAAGTGAGTACTCCTTGCTACTGTGATGGGACGT.
Figure 1Phenotypic characteristics of patients with . (A) Common facial features of patients with CHD8 mutations include macrocephaly, hypertelorism, down-slanted palpebral fissures, broad nose, pointed chin, and prominent supra-orbital ridge. (B) Longitudinal head circumference data for two patients (red and blue). At 2 months after birth, orbital frontal head growth is pronounced. Head growth continues to be in the 97th percentile throughout childhood. Figure originally published in Bernier et al. (2014) used with permission.
Phenotypic Summary of Patients with CHD8 Mutations.
| ASD | 13/15 (87%) |
| Tall stature | 12/14 (86%) |
| Macrocephaly | 12/15 (80%) |
| GI problems | 12/15 (80%) |
| Sleep problems | 10/15 (67%) |
| Intellectual disability | 9/15 (60%) |
Indicates significantly different from the typical ASD population.
Referenced Candidate ASD Risk Gene Lists.
| AutDB | “PubMed” database search for “gene” + “autism” or “autistic” in the titles and abstracts. Genes are divided into genetic subcategories and assigned evidence scores. Licensed to SFARI as SFARI Gene by MindSPec. | Broad | 667 | Basu et al., |
| asdM12 | Set of genes within a co-expression module (“M12”) highly correlated with ASD status. Module was constructed using WGCNA on gene expression from ASD (19) and control (17) postmortem cortex tissue. Samples from Autism Tissue Bank and Harvard Brain Bank. | Co-expression | 88 | Voineagu et al., |
| SFARI ASD | Subset of genes from AutDB filtered for gene category syndromic (S) (associated with syndromes in which a significant percentage of individuals develop autistic symptoms) and evidence score 1–4 (high confidence—minimal evidence). | Broad | 155 | Parikshak et al., |
| Willsey set | Genes identified with | Simplex dnLoF | 131 | Willsey et al., |
| Liu set | Genes identified by the DAWN algorithm as being implicated in ASD risk using data from the PFC-MSC co-expression module developed in Willsey et al. and from whole-exome sequencing studies in family trios (Iossifov et al., | dnLoF Rare transmitted variants Co-expression | 127 | Liu et al., |
Figure 2. (A) Flow chart describing functional genomics studies, Sugathan et al., Cotney et al., and Wilkinson et al. including CHD8 knockdown in cellular models of early neural development and ChIP-seq. Cotney et al. also incorporated primary fetal human cortical and embryonic mouse brain tissue into the ChIP-seq analysis. Integrating the gene expression and CHD8 binding profiles, networks of CHD8 regulated genes were constructed and analyzed for enrichment of candidate ASD risk genes. (B) CHD8 targeted candidate ASD risk genes found in the “Willsey set” observed between studies. Genes found in Cotney et al. specifically have CHD8 bound promoters. Human sites in Cotney et al. are shared between hNSCs and brain tissue. Though not included as part of the “Willsey set” in Cotney et al., POGZ is included here. POGZ was noted as having a CHD8 bound promoter and it is one of the high confidence “Willsey set” genes. (C) List of the shared candidate ASD risk genes from the “Willsey Set” bound by CHD8 between both studies and conserved between human and mouse.
Figure 3Proposed mechanisms for CHD8 transcriptional activation. (A) CHD8 is most commonly found near active transcription start sites with histone modifications H3K4me3 (green circle) or H3K27ac (yellow circle). CHD8 may directly activate genes by directly binding near the transcriptional start site and promote transcription factor activity or recruitment. (B) CHD8 may indirectly activate genes through interactions between modified histone sites and other co-regulators to make chromatin more assessable.