| Literature DB >> 30468562 |
Hamid M Abdolmaleky1,2, Adam C Gower3, Chen-Khuan Wong1,4, Jiayi W Cox1,5, Xiaoling Zhang1, Arunthathi Thiagalingam1, Rahim Shafa6, Vadivelu Sivaraman7, Jin-Rong Zhou2, Sam Thiagalingam1,4,8.
Abstract
Although the loss of brain laterality is one of the most consistent modalities in schizophrenia (SCZ) and bipolar disorder (BD), its molecular basis remains elusive. Our limited previous studies indicated that epigenetic modifications are key to the asymmetric transcriptomes of brain hemispheres. We used whole-genome expression microarrays to profile postmortem brain samples from subjects with SCZ, psychotic BD [BD[+]] or non-psychotic BD [BD(-)], or matched controls (10/group) and performed whole-genome DNA methylation (DNAM) profiling of the same samples (3-4/group) to identify pathways associated with SCZ or BD[+] and genes/sites susceptible to epigenetic regulation. qRT-PCR and quantitative DNAM analysis were employed to validate findings in larger sample sets (35/group). Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) demonstrated that BMP signaling and astrocyte and cerebral cortex development are significantly (FDR q < 0.25) coordinately upregulated in both SCZ and BD[+], and glutamate signaling and TGFβ signaling are significantly coordinately upregulated in SCZ. GSEA also indicated that collagens are downregulated in right versus left brain of controls, but not in SCZ or BD[+] patients. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis predicted that TGFB2 is an upstream regulator of these genes (p = .0012). While lateralized expression of TGFB2 in controls (p = .017) is associated with a corresponding change in DNAM (p ≤ .023), lateralized expression and DNAM of TGFB2 are absent in SCZ or BD. Loss of brain laterality in SCZ and BD corresponds to aberrant epigenetic regulation of TGFB2 and changes in TGFβ signaling, indicating potential avenues for disease prevention/treatment.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990NR2E1; zzm321990TGFB2; DNA methylation; brain asymmetry; schizophrenia
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30468562 PMCID: PMC6386618 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.32691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet ISSN: 1552-4841 Impact factor: 3.568