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Mapping DNA methylation across development, genotype and schizophrenia in the human frontal cortex
- Source :
- Nature neuroscience
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.
-
Abstract
- 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.
- Subjects :
- Male
0301 basic medicine
Genotype
Human Development
Quantitative Trait Loci
Gene Expression
Epigenetics of schizophrenia
brain development
Genome-wide association study
Tissue Banks
Quantitative trait locus
Biology
Article
Epigenesis, Genetic
03 medical and health sciences
mental disorders
Humans
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Epigenetics
Prefrontal cortex
Epigenomics
Genetics
DNA methylation
epigenetics
General Neuroscience
Brain
dNaM
030104 developmental biology
Gene Expression Regulation
Schizophrenia
CpG Islands
Female
Transcriptome
functional genomics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15461726 and 10976256
- Volume :
- 19
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature Neuroscience
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c4ecdd40cc310834290e3162dcca5770
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.4181