ID

45843

Description

Principal Investigator: Daniel H. Geschwind, MD, PhD, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA MeSH: Autistic Disorder https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs001022 Our current understanding of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) delineates a highly heritable, yet etiologically heterogeneous disease. Forward genetic approaches to find disease associated mutations or common variation have been successful and continue to offer considerable power. Yet, given the accumulating evidence for very significant heterogeneity and environmental influences, complementary approaches to classic forward genetics become necessary. Genetic polymorphism and mutation data to date have identified dozens of causal or contributory variants, yet our preliminary data from autism brain suggest that common molecular pathways are involved in a significant subset of cases. This convergence at the tissue level suggests that other mechanisms, specifically epigenetic changes, combined with genetic background, are contributing to such final common pathways. We further tested this hypothesis by taking a comprehensive and integrative genome-wide approach to assessing brain gene-expression, miRNA levels and the related, causal epigenetic mechanisms in ASD etiology. We performed RNA-seq analyses of four cerebral cortical regions and cerebellum from ASD cases and controls, to assess mRNA, miRNA, and splicing isoform regulation. In parallel, we identified key differences in chromatin state and DNA methylation across multiple brain regions in the same ASD and control individuals used in the expression analyses using ChIP-Seq and MeDIP. We assessed the mechanisms by which changes in DNA methylation, histone modification, and DNA sequence contribute to the observed differences in gene expression. This work, which represents an unprecedented effort to unify these often disparate data (usually produced without integration in mind), delineates potential shared molecular pathways in ASD and the underlying mechanism of these differences at the level of miRNA, the chromatin regulatory apparatus, and DNA methylation. The following substudies are part of the PsychENCODE release at dbGaP and offer additional molecular data:- PsychENCODE: RNA-Sequencing - SRRM4 Splicing Study phs000872 - PsychENCODE: Global Changes in Patterning, Splicing and lncRNAs phs001061 - PsychENCODE: Chromatin Contact Map in Fetal Cortical Laminae phs001190 - PsychENCODE: Epigenetic Dysregulation in Autism Spectrum Disorder phs001220

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs001022

Keywords

  1. 8/24/23 8/24/23 - Arman Ghanaat
Copyright Holder

Daniel H. Geschwind, MD, PhD, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Uploaded on

August 24, 2023

DOI

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License

Creative Commons BY 4.0

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dbGaP phs001022 PsychENCODE: Autism Transcriptional and Epigenetic Profiling

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Description

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C1512693
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C0680251
As many tissue samples from the Autism Tissue Program brain bank at the Harvard Brain and Tissue Bank and the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development Eunice Kennedy Shriver Brain and Tissue Bank for Developmental Disorders were used as could be acquired and balanced between cases and controls.
Description

Elig.phs001022.v1.p1.1

Data type

boolean

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C3831464
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C1292533
UMLS CUI [1,3]
C0449604

Similar models

Eligibility Criteria

Name
Type
Description | Question | Decode (Coded Value)
Data type
Alias
Item Group
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
C1512693 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C0680251 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
Elig.phs001022.v1.p1.1
Item
As many tissue samples from the Autism Tissue Program brain bank at the Harvard Brain and Tissue Bank and the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development Eunice Kennedy Shriver Brain and Tissue Bank for Developmental Disorders were used as could be acquired and balanced between cases and controls.
boolean
C3831464 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C1292533 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
C0449604 (UMLS CUI [1,3])

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