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Broad transcriptomic dysregulation occurs across the cerebral cortex in ASD.

Michael J GandalJillian R HaneyBrie WamsleyChloe X YapSepideh ParhamiPrashant S EmaniNathan ChangGeorge T ChenGil D HoftmanDiego de AlbaGokul RamaswamiChristopher L HartlArjun BhattacharyaChongyuan LuoTing JinDaifeng WangRiki KawaguchiDiana QuinteroJing OuYe Emily WuNeelroop N ParikshakVivek SwarupT Grant BelgardMark GersteinBogdan PasaniucDaniel H Geschwind
Published in: Nature (2022)
Neuropsychiatric disorders classically lack defining brain pathologies, but recent work has demonstrated dysregulation at the molecular level, characterized by transcriptomic and epigenetic alterations<sup>1-3</sup>. In autism spectrum disorder (ASD), this molecular pathology involves the upregulation of microglial, astrocyte and neural-immune genes, the downregulation of synaptic genes, and attenuation of gene-expression gradients in cortex<sup>1,2,4-6</sup>. However, whether these changes are limited to cortical association regions or are more widespread remains unknown. To address this issue, we performed RNA-sequencing analysis of 725 brain samples spanning 11 cortical areas from 112 post-mortem samples from individuals with ASD and neurotypical controls. We find widespread transcriptomic changes across the cortex in ASD, exhibiting an anterior-to-posterior gradient, with the greatest differences in primary visual cortex, coincident with an attenuation of the typical transcriptomic differences between cortical regions. Single-nucleus RNA-sequencing and methylation profiling demonstrate that this robust molecular signature reflects changes in cell-type-specific gene expression, particularly affecting excitatory neurons and glia. Both rare and common ASD-associated genetic variation converge within a downregulated co-expression module involving synaptic signalling, and common variation alone is enriched within a module of upregulated protein chaperone genes. These results highlight widespread molecular changes across the cerebral cortex in ASD, extending beyond association cortex to broadly involve primary sensory regions.
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