4.8 Article

Broad transcriptomic dysregulation occurs across the cerebral cortex in ASD

Journal

NATURE
Volume 611, Issue 7936, Pages 532-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05377-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Simons Foundation
  2. University of Maryland Brain and Tissue Bank-a component of the NIH NeuroBiobank
  3. NIMH [R01MH110927, U01MH115746, P50-MH106438, R01MH109912, R01MH094714, R01-MH121521, R01-MH123922, F32MH124337, R01-MH125252]
  4. SFARI Bridge to Independence Award
  5. Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation Los Angeles Founder Chapter, UCLA Neuroscience Interdepartmental Program
  6. SFARI Grant [675474]
  7. UCLA Friends of the Semel Institute Research Scholar Award
  8. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists
  9. Fulbright Future Scholarship
  10. UQ RTP Stipend and Tuition Fee Offset
  11. Sam and Marion Frazer HDR Top-up Scholarship in Neurological Disease,
  12. Autism CRC
  13. [NICHD-P50-HD103557]

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This study demonstrates widespread transcriptomic changes in the cerebral cortex of individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), with an anterior-to-posterior gradient. These changes primarily affect gene expression in excitatory neurons and glia. Additionally, both rare and common ASD-associated genetic variations converge within specific co-expression modules involving synaptic signaling and protein chaperone genes.
Neuropsychiatric disorders classically lack defining brain pathologies, but recent work has demonstrated dysregulation at the molecular level, characterized by transcriptomic and epigenetic alterations(1-3). 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(1,2,4-6). 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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