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Methyl-CpG binding domain 2 (Mbd2) is an Epigenetic Regulator of Autism-Risk Genes and Cognition

Authors :
Elad Lax
Sonia DoCarmo
Yehoshua Enuka
Daniel M. Sapozhnikov
Lindsay A. Welikovitch
Niaz Mahmood
Shafaat A. Rabbani
Liqing Wang
Jonathan P. Britt
Wayne W. Hancock
Yosef Yarden
Moshe Szyf
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

The Methyl-CpG-Binding Domain Protein family has been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders. The Methyl-CpG-binding domain 2 (Mbd2) binds methylated DNA and was shown to play an important role in cancer and immunity. Some evidence linked this protein to neurodevelopment. However, its exact role in neurodevelopment and brain function is mostly unknown.Here we show that Mbd2-deficiency in mice (Mbd2−/−) results in deficits in cognitive, social and emotional functions. Mbd2 binds regulatory DNA regions of neuronal genes in the hippocampus and loss of Mbd2 alters the expression of hundreds of genes with a robust down-regulation of neuronal gene pathways. Further, a genome-wide DNA methylation analysis found an altered DNA methylation pattern in regulatory DNA regions of neuronal genes in Mbd2−/− mice. Differentially expressed genes significantly overlap with gene-expression changes observed in brains of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) individuals. Notably, down-regulated genes are significantly enriched for human ortholog ASD risk-genes. Observed hippocampal morphological abnormalities were similar to those found in individuals with ASD and ASD rodent models. Hippocampal Mbd2 knockdown partially recapitulates the behavioral phenotypes observed in Mbd2−/− mice.These findings suggest Mbd2 is a novel epigenetic regulator of genes that are associated with ASD in humans. Mbd2 loss causes behavioral alterations that resemble those found in ASD individuals.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....611bcf3fde0e227ccffbad927c437365
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/247197