| Literature DB >> 35168652 |
Yihui Zhu1,2,3,4, J Antonio Gomez1,2,3,4, Benjamin I Laufer1,2,3,4, Charles E Mordaunt1,2,3,4, Julia S Mouat1,2,3,4, Daniela C Soto3,4,5, Megan Y Dennis3,4,5, Kelly S Benke6, Kelly M Bakulski7, John Dou7, Ria Marathe1,2,3,4, Julia M Jianu1,2,3,4, Logan A Williams1,2,3,4, Orangel J Gutierrez Fugón1,2,3,4, Cheryl K Walker2,4,8, Sally Ozonoff4,9, Jason Daniels10, Luke P Grosvenor10, Heather E Volk10,11, Jason I Feinberg11, M Daniele Fallin11, Irva Hertz-Picciotto2,4,6, Rebecca J Schmidt2,4,6, Dag H Yasui1,2,3,4, Janine M LaSalle12,13,14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) involves complex genetics interacting with the perinatal environment, complicating the discovery of common genetic risk. The epigenetic layer of DNA methylation shows dynamic developmental changes and molecular memory of in utero experiences, particularly in placenta, a fetal tissue discarded at birth. However, current array-based methods to identify novel ASD risk genes lack coverage of the most structurally and epigenetically variable regions of the human genome.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; DNA methylation; Epigenomics; Human genetics; Hypoxia; Neurodevelopment; Placenta; Postmortem brain; Prospective study; Structural variants
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35168652 PMCID: PMC8848662 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-022-02613-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 17.906
Fig. 1ASD-associated DMRs are enriched at fetal brains enhancers and a co-methylated block at 22q13.33 replicates across studies and platforms. A Schematic of the experimental design for discovery of ASD DMRs, replication of the co-methylated 22q13.33 locus, genetic associations, and functional follow-up of a novel gene (NHIP). B Circular Manhattan plot of the epigenome-wide association of DNA methylation in placenta with ASD diagnosis at 36 months. Results are represented as DMR association test results (− log10(p)). Significant thresholds are blue for permutation p value < 0.05, red for FDR-adjusted permutation p value < 0.05, and gray for nonsignificant. C 134 ASD DMRs (permutation p value < 0.05) tested for enrichment within chromatin states defined by Epigenome Roadmap ChromHMM [35]. Each row represents a different ChromHMM state and each column a single tissue type, with the heatmap plotting the − log10(q-value) significance of ASD DMR enrichment. D Correlation matrix of methylation levels using the Pearson correlation coefficient for the 12 DMRs located in the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block. E Smoothed methylation values were averaged over the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block (y-axis) and compared across diagnosis groups (x-axis). In the discovery group, ASD samples had significantly lower methylation than TD samples (MARBLES, HiSeq X, ASD n = 46, TD n = 46) (p value = 0.002). The same result and direction were observed in the external replication group (EARLI, HiSeq 2500, ASD n = 16, TD n = 31) (p value = 0.009). For the specificity replication group (MARBLES, NovaSeq, ASD n = 21, Non-TD n = 13, TD n = 31), ASD methylation levels were also significantly lower than both TD (p value = 0.005) and Non-TD (p value = 0.049), while Non-TD was significantly lower than TD samples (p value = 0.050) by Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon. Box plot center lines, box limits, and whiskers represented median, interquartile range, and minimum and maximum values, respectively
Fig. 2Functional characterization of NHIP transcript levels in response to neuronal hypoxia. In a–e RT-qPCR assays, NHIP levels were normalized to GAPDH with at least three independent experiments per condition. A NHIP levels in human tissues, including adult brain, fetal brain, placenta, and testis. B NHIP levels in placenta samples from the discovery group (ASD n = 17, TD n = 11). ASD samples show significantly lower NHIP levels than TD samples (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.009). C NHIP levels in human cell lines, HEK293T, IMR90, LUHMES, and SH-SY5Y. In LUHMES cells, NHIP levels were significantly higher in differentiated neurons compared to undifferentiated neurons (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.034). D Differentiated LUHMES cells are more sensitive to hypoxia than undifferentiated LUHMES cells. Formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was measured in differentiated and undifferentiated LUHMES cells treated with 100 nM CoCl2, a hypoxia mimetic, or vehicle (mock) (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.0001). E NHIP levels increase in response to hypoxia, specifically in differentiated neurons. Differentiated or undifferentiated LUHMES cells were treated with 100 nM CoCl2. In differentiated LUHMES cells, CoCl2 treatment significantly increased NHIP levels (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.009). F NHIP overexpression in HEK293T cells resulted in a faster doubling time than vector control cells, indicating increased cell proliferation. (Hour 142, Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.045, NHIP overexpression cells n = 3, control cells n = 3, effect size = 3.10; Hour 166, Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.0009, NHIP overexpression cells n = 3, control cells n = 3, effect size = 7.80). G Vector design of NHIP peptide-eGFP (dotted line represents excised ATG of EGFP) and combined phase and fluorescent microscopy. Green, eGFP linked to NHIP peptide; red, mCherry, transfection positive control. Scale bars, 100 μm. H Immunofluorescent staining of human frontal cortex, showing nuclear localization with anti-NHIP, but not pre-immune control. Blue, DAPI nuclear counterstain; red, anti-NHIP staining. Scale bars, 100 μm. Data are mean ± SEM
Fig. 3A common genetic structural variant is significantly associated with 22q13.33 DNA methylation and ASD. A Insertion location (orange) relative to the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block (blue), and the novel transcript, NHIP (red) in the UCSC genome browser. The 22q13.33 co-methylated block was 117,974 bp in length (blue). NHIP TSS was located 7881 bp downstream from the start of the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block. The insertion (not in the reference genome) is 15,013 bp upstream from the start of the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block. B The association matrix shows ANOVA p values for the comparison of the insertion genotype (homozygous for insertion versus not) with smoothed methylation levels within each of 12 DMRs located in the 22q13.33 hypomethylated block from the discovery group (ASD n = 41, TD n = 37). C Association was tested between insertion genotype (Y, homozygous for insertion; N, not) and 22q13.33 co-methylated block methylation levels (discovery group, ASD n = 41, TD n = 37). ASD showed significantly lower DNA methylation levels compared to TD placenta samples within the entire 22q13.33 co-methylated block (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.008, ASD n = 41, TD n = 37, effect size = −0.645). Samples homozygous for the insertion had significantly lower methylation than those not having insertion on one or both alleles (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.004, Y n = 29, N n = 49, effect size = − 0.644). When broken down by diagnosis, samples with insertion had significantly lower methylation specifically in ASD samples (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.005, Y n = 20, N n = 21, effect size = −0.878), not TD samples (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.847, Y n = 9, N n = 28, effect size = −0.173). D Periconceptional prenatal vitamin use was a significant modifier of 22q13.33 block methylation in placenta (discovery group, ASD n = 41, TD n = 37). Lower percent methylation at the 22q13.33 co-methylated block was significantly associated with not taking prenatal vitamins during the first month of pregnancy (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, p value = 0.001), which was in the same direction as ASD risk. E UCSC genome browser map shows the insertion location (orange vertical line) relative to two adjacent CTCF sites (green arrows) and NHIP. Both undifferentiated and differentiated LUHMES cells have both CTCF sites, consistent with them being homozygous for the reference sequence. Additional brain tracks show the variability of the upstream CTCF site between human samples. ChromHMM tracks were derived from fetal brain, multiple brain regions, ovary, and placenta. Red, active promoter; yellow, active enhancer; green; active transcriptional elongation; purple, bivalent poised chromatin. F Working model to explain ASD risk associated with SV homozygosity. Illustrations created with BioRender.com
Fig. 4NHIP levels in brain are reduced in ASD and associated with expression of genes enriched for synaptic functions, response to oxidative stress, and ASD risk. A Brain samples homozygous for the 22q13.33 insertion had significantly lower NHIP levels compared to those who were not (p value = 0.048). The association between NHIP levels and the insertion was observed specifically in ASD (p value = 0.036), not in TD (p value = 0.711) (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon, brain, ASD n = 13, TD n = 10). B NHIP-associated differential expression analysis was performed from brain RNA-seq, adjusted for sex, age, brain region, and PMI, identifying 534 genome-wide significant genes (FDR-adjusted q-value < 0.05). C Gene ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of the 851 NHIP-associated genes in brain identified significantly enriched terms (FDR-adjusted q-value < 0.05). Positively associated GO terms are shown in red and negatively associated GO terms are colored in blue. D Venn diagram representing the 30 genes in common between NHIP association in brain (adjusted), differential gene expression (DGE) in the NHIP overexpressed cell line, and SFARI ASD risk genes. Genes are listed in Table 1 with common functional categories
Functional categories of genes showing adjusted NHIP-associated expression in human cortex, differential expression in NHIP overexpressing cells, and known ASD risk (from Fig. 4d overlap)
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| Genes | Chromatin organization | Regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase II | Histone modification | Rhythmic process | Dendritic spine | Regulation of biosynthetic process | Count |
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