Transcriptional regulatory networks underlying gene expression changes in Huntington's disease.
Seth A AmentJocelynn R PearlJeffrey P CantleRobert M BraggPeter J SkeneSydney R CoffeyDani E BergeyVanessa C WheelerMarcy E MacDonaldNitin S BaligaJim RosinskiLeroy E HoodJeffrey B CarrollNathan D PricePublished in: Molecular systems biology (2018)
Transcriptional changes occur presymptomatically and throughout Huntington's disease (HD), motivating the study of transcriptional regulatory networks (TRNs) in HD We reconstructed a genome-scale model for the target genes of 718 transcription factors (TFs) in the mouse striatum by integrating a model of genomic binding sites with transcriptome profiling of striatal tissue from HD mouse models. We identified 48 differentially expressed TF-target gene modules associated with age- and CAG repeat length-dependent gene expression changes in Htt CAG knock-in mouse striatum and replicated many of these associations in independent transcriptomic and proteomic datasets. Thirteen of 48 of these predicted TF-target gene modules were also differentially expressed in striatal tissue from human disease. We experimentally validated a specific model prediction that SMAD3 regulates HD-related gene expression changes using chromatin immunoprecipitation and deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) of mouse striatum. We found CAG repeat length-dependent changes in the genomic occupancy of SMAD3 and confirmed our model's prediction that many SMAD3 target genes are downregulated early in HD.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- dna methylation
- single cell
- genome wide identification
- copy number
- rna seq
- transforming growth factor
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- endothelial cells
- high throughput
- functional connectivity
- dna damage
- mouse model
- oxidative stress
- circulating tumor cells
- pluripotent stem cells