Mapping DNA methylation across development, genotype and schizophrenia in the human frontal cortex.
Andrew E JaffeYuan GaoAmy Deep-SoboslayRan TaoThomas M HydeDaniel R WeinbergerJoel E KleinmanPublished in: Nature neuroscience (2015)
DNA methylation (DNAm) is important in brain development and is potentially important in schizophrenia. We characterized DNAm in prefrontal cortex from 335 non-psychiatric controls across the lifespan and 191 patients with schizophrenia and identified widespread changes in the transition from prenatal to postnatal life. These DNAm changes manifest in the transcriptome, correlate strongly with a shifting cellular landscape and overlap regions of genetic risk for schizophrenia. A quarter of published genome-wide association studies (GWAS)-suggestive loci (4,208 of 15,930, P < 10(-100)) manifest as significant methylation quantitative trait loci (meQTLs), including 59.6% of GWAS-positive schizophrenia loci. We identified 2,104 CpGs that differ between schizophrenia patients and controls that were enriched for genes related to development and neurodifferentiation. The schizophrenia-associated CpGs strongly correlate with changes related to the prenatal-postnatal transition and show slight enrichment for GWAS risk loci while not corresponding to CpGs differentiating adolescence from later adult life. These data implicate an epigenetic component to the developmental origins of this disorder.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- bipolar disorder
- genome wide association
- gene expression
- copy number
- genome wide association study
- pregnant women
- functional connectivity
- preterm infants
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- ejection fraction
- resting state
- transcription factor
- peritoneal dialysis
- electronic health record
- systematic review
- machine learning
- computed tomography
- single cell
- patient reported outcomes
- young adults
- depressive symptoms
- artificial intelligence
- working memory
- induced pluripotent stem cells