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    Date Issued2018 (1)2015 (1)2014 (1)AuthorAkbarian, Schahram (3)
    Sklar, Pamela (3)
    Jiang, Yan (2)Mattei, Eugenio (2)Roussos, Panos (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (2)Program in Bioinformatics and Integrative Biology (2)Brudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute (1)Department of Psychiatry (1)Futai Lab (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordComputational Biology (2)Genomics (2)Nervous System Diseases (2)Neuroscience and Neurobiology (2)Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Antipsychotic Agents; Cells, Cultured; Cerebral Cortex; Chromatin; Cognition; Female; Gene Expression Regulation; HEK293 Cells; Humans; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Transgenic; Middle Aged; Neurons; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate; Schizophrenia; Signal Transduction; Transcription Factors (1)View MoreJournalNature neuroscience (2)Neuron (1)

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    Cell-specific histone modification maps in the human frontal lobe link schizophrenia risk to the neuronal epigenome

    Girdhar, Kiran; Hoffman, Gabriel E.; Jiang, Yan; Brown, Leanne; Kundakovic, Marija; Hauberg, Mads E.; Francoeur, Nancy J.; Wang, Ying-Chih; Shah, Hardik; Kavanagh, David H.; et al. (2018-08-01)
    Risk variants for schizophrenia affect more than 100 genomic loci, yet cell- and tissue-specific roles underlying disease liability remain poorly characterized. We have generated for two cortical areas implicated in psychosis, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex, 157 reference maps from neuronal, neuron-depleted and bulk tissue chromatin for two histone marks associated with active promoters and enhancers, H3-trimethyl-Lys4 (H3K4me3) and H3-acetyl-Lys27 (H3K27ac). Differences between neuronal and neuron-depleted chromatin states were the major axis of variation in histone modification profiles, followed by substantial variability across subjects and cortical areas. Thousands of significant histone quantitative trait loci were identified in neuronal and neuron-depleted samples. Risk variants for schizophrenia, depressive symptoms and neuroticism were significantly over-represented in neuronal H3K4me3 and H3K27ac landscapes. Our Resource, sponsored by PsychENCODE and CommonMind, highlights the critical role of cell-type-specific signatures at regulatory and disease-associated noncoding sequences in the human frontal lobe.
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    The PsychENCODE project

    Akbarian, Schahram; Weng, Zhiping; Mattei, Eugenio; Purcaro, Michael; Tsuji, Junko; Senthil, Geetha; Lehner, Thomas; Sklar, Pamela; Sestan, Nenad; PsychENCODE Consortium (2015-11-25)
    Recent research on disparate psychiatric disorders has implicated rare variants in genes involved in global gene regulation and chromatin modification, as well as many common variants located primarily in regulatory regions of the genome. Understanding precisely how these variants contribute to disease will require a deeper appreciation for the mechanisms of gene regulation in the developing and adult human brain. The PsychENCODE project aims to produce a public resource of multidimensional genomic data using tissue- and cell type–specific samples from approximately 1,000 phenotypically well-characterized, high-quality healthy and disease-affected human post-mortem brains, as well as functionally characterize disease-associated regulatory elements and variants in model systems. We are beginning with a focus on autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and expect that this knowledge will apply to a wide variety of psychiatric disorders. This paper outlines the motivation and design of PsychENCODE.
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    Conserved higher-order chromatin regulates NMDA receptor gene expression and cognition

    Bharadwaj, Rahul; Peter, Cyril J.; Jiang, Yan; Roussos, Panos; Vogel-Ciernia, Annie; Shen, Erica Y.; Mitchell, Amanda C.; Mao, Wenjie; Whittle, Catheryne; Dincer, Aslihan; et al. (2014-12-03)
    Three-dimensional chromosomal conformations regulate transcription by moving enhancers and regulatory elements into spatial proximity with target genes. Here we describe activity-regulated long-range loopings bypassing up to 0.5 Mb of linear genome to modulate NMDA glutamate receptor GRIN2B expression in human and mouse prefrontal cortex. Distal intronic and 3' intergenic loop formations competed with repressor elements to access promoter-proximal sequences, and facilitated expression via a "cargo" of AP-1 and NRF-1 transcription factors and TALE-based transcriptional activators. Neuronal deletion or overexpression of Kmt2a/Mll1 H3K4- and Kmt1e/Setdb1 H3K9-methyltransferase was associated with higher-order chromatin changes at distal regulatory Grin2b sequences and impairments in working memory. Genetic polymorphisms and isogenic deletions of loop-bound sequences conferred liability for cognitive performance and decreased GRIN2B expression. Dynamic regulation of chromosomal conformations emerges as a novel layer for transcriptional mechanisms impacting neuronal signaling and cognition.
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