| Literature DB >> 27863250 |
Wenjie Sun1, Jeremie Poschmann1, Ricardo Cruz-Herrera Del Rosario2, Neelroop N Parikshak3, Hajira Shreen Hajan1, Vibhor Kumar1, Ramalakshmi Ramasamy1, T Grant Belgard3, Bavani Elanggovan1, Chloe Chung Yi Wong4, Jonathan Mill5, Daniel H Geschwind6, Shyam Prabhakar7.
Abstract
The association of histone modification changes with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has not been systematically examined. We conducted a histone acetylome-wide association study (HAWAS) by performing H3K27ac chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) on 257 postmortem samples from ASD and matched control brains. Despite etiological heterogeneity, ≥68% of syndromic and idiopathic ASD cases shared a common acetylome signature at >5,000 cis-regulatory elements in prefrontal and temporal cortex. Similarly, multiple genes associated with rare genetic mutations in ASD showed common "epimutations." Acetylome aberrations in ASD were not attributable to genetic differentiation at cis-SNPs and highlighted genes involved in synaptic transmission, ion transport, epilepsy, behavioral abnormality, chemokinesis, histone deacetylation, and immunity. By correlating histone acetylation with genotype, we discovered >2,000 histone acetylation quantitative trait loci (haQTLs) in human brain regions, including four candidate causal variants for psychiatric diseases. Due to the relative stability of histone modifications postmortem, we anticipate that the HAWAS approach will be applicable to multiple diseases.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; disease-epigenetic alterations; epigenetics; histone acetylation; histone acetylation quantitative trait loci; regulome profiling
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27863250 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.10.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582