학술논문

Allele-specific open chromatin in human iPSC neurons elucidates functional disease variants
NEUROGENOMICS
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Science. July 31, 2020, Vol. 369 Issue 6503, p561, 5 p.
Subject
Genetic aspects
Analysis
Transcription (Genetics)
Neurons
Stem cells
Genes
Quantitative genetics
Chromatin
Genes -- Analysis
Genes -- Genetic aspects
Genetic transcription -- Genetic aspects
Genetic transcription -- Analysis
Neurons -- Analysis
Neurons -- Genetic aspects
Quantitative genetics -- Analysis
Chromatin -- Genetic aspects
Chromatin -- Analysis
Stem cells -- Genetic aspects
Stem cells -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0036-8075
Abstract
Most neuropsychiatric disease risk variants are in noncoding sequences and lack functional interpretation. Because regulatory sequences often reside in open chromatin, we reasoned that neuropsychiatric disease risk variants may affect chromatin accessibility during neurodevelopment. Using human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons that model developing brains, we identified thousands of genetic variants exhibiting allele-specific open chromatin (ASoC). These neuronal ASoCs were partially driven by altered transcription factor binding, overrepresented in brain gene enhancers and expression quantitative trait loci, and frequently associated with distal genes through chromatin contacts. ASoCs were enriched for genetic variants associated with brain disorders, enabling identification of functional schizophrenia risk variants and their cis-target genes. This study highlights ASoC as a functional mechanism of noncoding neuropsychiatric risk variants, providing a powerful framework for identifying disease causal variants and genes.