Title
Transcriptional consequences of MBD5 disruption in mouse brain and CRISPR-derived neurons
Date Issued
05 June 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
research article
Author(s)
Seabra C.M.
Seabra C.M.
Seabra C.M.
Aneichyk T.
Aneichyk T.
Aneichyk T.
Erdin S.
Erdin S.
Tai D.J.C.
Tai D.J.C.
Tai D.J.C.
De Esch C.E.F.
De Esch C.E.F.
De Esch C.E.F.
Razaz P.
Razaz P.
Razaz P.
An Y.
An Y.
Manavalan P.
Ragavendran A.
Ragavendran A.
Ragavendran A.
Stortchevoi A.
Abad C.
Young J.I.
MacIel P.
MacIel P.
Talkowski M.E.
Talkowski M.E.
Talkowski M.E.
Gusella J.F.
Gusella J.F.
Gusella J.F.
Gusella J.F.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Universidade do Porto
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Independent Data Lab UG
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Fudan University
Massachusetts General Hospital
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
The Warren Alpert Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine
University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine
Escola de Medicina da Universidade do Minho
Universidade do Minho
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute
Harvard Medical School
Harvard Stem Cell Institute
Abstract
Background: MBD5, encoding the methyl-CpG-binding domain 5 protein, has been proposed as a necessary and sufficient driver of the 2q23.1 microdeletion syndrome. De novo missense and protein-truncating variants from exome sequencing studies have directly implicated MBD5 in the etiology of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and related neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). However, little is known concerning the specific function(s) of MBD5. Methods: To gain insight into the complex interactions associated with alteration of MBD5 in individuals with ASD and related NDDs, we explored the transcriptional landscape of MBD5 haploinsufficiency across multiple mouse brain regions of a heterozygous hypomorphic Mbd5 +/GT mouse model, and compared these results to CRISPR-mediated mutations of MBD5 in human iPSC-derived neuronal models. Results: Gene expression analyses across three brain regions from Mbd5 +/GT mice showed subtle transcriptional changes, with cortex displaying the most widespread changes following Mbd5 reduction, indicating context-dependent effects. Comparison with MBD5 reduction in human neuronal cells reinforced the context-dependence of gene expression changes due to MBD5 deficiency. Gene co-expression network analyses revealed gene clusters that were associated with reduced MBD5 expression and enriched for terms related to ciliary function. Limitations: These analyses included a limited number of mouse brain regions and neuronal models, and the effects of the gene knockdown are subtle. As such, these results will not reflect the full extent of MBD5 disruption across human brain regions during early neurodevelopment in ASD, or capture the diverse spectrum of cell-type-specific changes associated with MBD5 alterations. Conclusions: Our study points to modest and context-dependent transcriptional consequences of Mbd5 disruption in the brain. It also suggests a possible link between MBD5 and perturbations in ciliary function, which is an established pathogenic mechanism in developmental disorders and syndromes.
Volume
11
Issue
1
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85086008448
PubMed ID
Source
Molecular Autism
ISSN of the container
20402392
Sources of information:
Scopus
Directorio de Producción CientÃfica