학술논문

Evidence for the placenta-brain axis: multi-omic kernel aggregation predicts intellectual and social impairment in children born extremely preterm
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular Autism. 11(1)
Subject
Preterm
Low Birth Weight and Health of the Newborn
Genetics
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD)
Human Genome
Neurosciences
Mental Health
Biotechnology
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Infant Mortality
Pediatric
Autism
Behavioral and Social Science
Prevention
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Reproductive health and childbirth
Mental health
Adult
Algorithms
Biomarkers
Brain
Case-Control Studies
Child
Cognition
CpG Islands
Female
Genome-Wide Association Study
Genomics
Humans
Infant
Extremely Premature
Infant
Newborn
Intellectual Disability
Intelligence Tests
Male
MicroRNAs
Multivariate Analysis
Placenta
Pregnancy
Premature Birth
RNA
Messenger
Social Behavior
Prenatal neurodevelopmental programming
Social and cognitive impairment
Placental gene regulation
Epigenome-wide association
Differential expression analysis
Multi-omic aggregation
Clinical Sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundChildren born extremely preterm are at heightened risk for intellectual and social impairment, including Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). There is increasing evidence for a key role of the placenta in prenatal developmental programming, suggesting that the placenta may, in part, contribute to origins of neurodevelopmental outcomes.MethodsWe examined associations between placental transcriptomic and epigenomic profiles and assessed their ability to predict intellectual and social impairment at age 10 years in 379 children from the Extremely Low Gestational Age Newborn (ELGAN) cohort. Assessment of intellectual ability (IQ) and social function was completed with the Differential Ability Scales-II and Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), respectively. Examining IQ and SRS allows for studying ASD risk beyond the diagnostic criteria, as IQ and SRS are continuous measures strongly correlated with ASD. Genome-wide mRNA, CpG methylation and miRNA were assayeds with the Illumina Hiseq 2500, HTG EdgeSeq miRNA Whole Transcriptome Assay, and Illumina EPIC/850 K array, respectively. We conducted genome-wide differential analyses of placental mRNA, miRNA, and CpG methylation data. These molecular features were then integrated for a predictive analysis of IQ and SRS outcomes using kernel aggregation regression. We lastly examined associations between ASD and the multi-omic-predicted component of IQ and SRS.ResultsGenes with important roles in neurodevelopment and placental tissue organization were associated with intellectual and social impairment. Kernel aggregations of placental multi-omics strongly predicted intellectual and social function, explaining approximately 8% and 12% of variance in SRS and IQ scores via cross-validation, respectively. Predicted in-sample SRS and IQ showed significant positive and negative associations with ASD case-control status.LimitationsThe ELGAN cohort comprises children born pre-term, and generalization may be affected by unmeasured confounders associated with low gestational age. We conducted external validation of predictive models, though the sample size (N = 49) and the scope of the available out-sample placental dataset are limited. Further validation of the models is merited.ConclusionsAggregating information from biomarkers within and among molecular data types improves prediction of complex traits like social and intellectual ability in children born extremely preterm, suggesting that traits within the placenta-brain axis may be omnigenic.