학술논문

Placental methylome reveals a 22q13.33 brain regulatory gene locus associated with autism
Document Type
article
Source
Genome Biology. 23(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Neurosciences
Pediatric Research Initiative
Autism
Human Genome
Stem Cell Research
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD)
Biotechnology
Prevention
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Brain Disorders
Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human
Pediatric
Mental Health
Underpinning research
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Mental health
Neurological
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Autistic Disorder
Brain
DNA Methylation
Epigenesis
Genetic
Epigenome
Female
Genes
Regulator
Humans
Infant
Newborn
Placenta
Pregnancy
Prospective Studies
Autism spectrum disorder
Epigenomics
Human genetics
Structural variants
DNA methylation
Prospective study
Hypoxia
Neurodevelopment
Postmortem brain
Environmental Sciences
Information and Computing Sciences
Bioinformatics
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAutism 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.ResultsWe use whole genome bisulfite sequencing in placenta samples from prospective ASD studies to discover a previously uncharacterized ASD risk gene, LOC105373085, renamed NHIP. Out of 134 differentially methylated regions associated with ASD in placental samples, a cluster at 22q13.33 corresponds to a 118-kb hypomethylated block that replicates in two additional cohorts. Within this locus, NHIP is functionally characterized as a nuclear peptide-encoding transcript with high expression in brain, and increased expression following neuronal differentiation or hypoxia, but decreased expression in ASD placenta and brain. NHIP overexpression increases cellular proliferation and alters expression of genes regulating synapses and neurogenesis, overlapping significantly with known ASD risk genes and NHIP-associated genes in ASD brain. A common structural variant disrupting the proximity of NHIP to a fetal brain enhancer is associated with NHIP expression and methylation levels and ASD risk, demonstrating a common genetic influence.ConclusionsTogether, these results identify and initially characterize a novel environmentally responsive ASD risk gene relevant to brain development in a hitherto under-characterized region of the human genome.