4.7 Article

MORC1 exhibits cross-species differential methylation in association with early life stress as well as genome-wide association with MDD

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TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
卷 4, 期 -, 页码 -

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/tp.2014.75

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资金

  1. Era-Net Neuron grant
  2. fonds de recherche Sante Quebec (FRSQ) [24419]
  3. National Genome Research Network (NGFNplus) of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01GS08144, 01GS08147]
  4. Fondazione CARIPLO [2012-0503]
  5. Dietmar-Hopp Foundation
  6. Olympia-Morata-Programme of the University of Heidelberg
  7. Boehringer-Ingelheim Fonds
  8. Division of Intramural Research, NICHD, HIH

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Early life stress (ELS) is associated with increased vulnerability for diseases in later life, including psychiatric disorders. Animal models and human studies suggest that this effect is mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. In humans, epigenetic studies to investigate the influence of ELS on psychiatric phenotypes are limited by the inaccessibility of living brain tissue. Due to the tissue-specific nature of epigenetic signatures, it is impossible to determine whether ELS induced epigenetic changes in accessible peripheral cells, for example, blood lymphocytes, reflect epigenetic changes in the brain. To overcome these limitations, we applied a cross-species approach involving: (i) the analysis of CD34+ cells from human cord blood; (ii) the examination of blood-derived CD3+ T cells of newborn and adolescent nonhuman primates (Macaca mulatta); and (iii) the investigation of the prefrontal cortex of adult rats. Several regions in MORC1 (MORC family CW-type zinc finger 1; previously known as: microrchidia (mouse) homolog) were differentially methylated in response to ELS in CD34+ cells and CD3+ T cells derived from the blood of human and monkey neonates, as well as in CD3+ T cells derived from the blood of adolescent monkeys and in the prefrontal cortex of adult rats. MORC1 is thus the first identified epigenetic marker of ELS to be present in blood cell progenitors at birth and in the brain in adulthood. Interestingly, a gene-set-based analysis of data from a genome-wide association study of major depressive disorder (MDD) revealed an association of MORC1 with MDD.

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