Barr C L, Misener V L
Toronto Western Research Institute, University Health Network.
Program in Neurosciences and Mental Health, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Genes Brain Behav. 2016 Jan;15(1):187-204. doi: 10.1111/gbb.12269. Epub 2016 Jan 4.
Current evidence emerging from genome-wide association studies indicates that the genetic underpinnings of complex traits are likely attributable to genetic variation that changes gene expression, rather than (or in combination with) variation that changes protein-coding sequences. This is particularly compelling with respect to psychiatric disorders, as genetic changes in regulatory regions may result in differential transcriptional responses to developmental cues and environmental/psychosocial stressors. Until recently, however, the link between transcriptional regulation and psychiatric genetic risk has been understudied. Multiple obstacles have contributed to the paucity of research in this area, including challenges in identifying the positions of remote (distal from the promoter) regulatory elements (e.g. enhancers) and their target genes and the underrepresentation of neural cell types and brain tissues in epigenome projects - the availability of high-quality brain tissues for epigenetic and transcriptome profiling, particularly for the adolescent and developing brain, has been limited. Further challenges have arisen in the prediction and testing of the functional impact of DNA variation with respect to multiple aspects of transcriptional control, including regulatory-element interaction (e.g. between enhancers and promoters), transcription factor binding and DNA methylation. Further, the brain has uncommon DNA-methylation marks with unique genomic distributions not found in other tissues - current evidence suggests the involvement of non-CG methylation and 5-hydroxymethylation in neurodevelopmental processes but much remains unknown. We review here knowledge gaps as well as both technological and resource obstacles that will need to be overcome in order to elucidate the involvement of brain-relevant gene-regulatory variants in genetic risk for psychiatric disorders.
全基因组关联研究中出现的当前证据表明,复杂性状的遗传基础可能归因于改变基因表达的遗传变异,而非(或与)改变蛋白质编码序列的变异。这在精神疾病方面尤其引人注目,因为调控区域的基因变化可能导致对发育线索以及环境/心理社会应激源的不同转录反应。然而,直到最近,转录调控与精神疾病遗传风险之间的联系仍未得到充分研究。该领域研究匮乏是由多个障碍导致的,包括识别远端(远离启动子)调控元件(如增强子)及其靶基因位置的挑战,以及表观基因组项目中神经细胞类型和脑组织代表性不足——用于表观遗传和转录组分析的高质量脑组织,尤其是青少年和发育中的大脑组织,其可用性一直有限。在预测和测试DNA变异对转录控制多个方面的功能影响时,包括调控元件相互作用(如增强子与启动子之间)、转录因子结合和DNA甲基化,还出现了进一步的挑战。此外,大脑具有不常见的DNA甲基化标记,其独特的基因组分布在其他组织中未发现——目前的证据表明非CG甲基化和5-羟甲基化参与神经发育过程,但仍有许多未知之处。我们在此回顾知识空白以及技术和资源障碍,为阐明与大脑相关的基因调控变异在精神疾病遗传风险中的作用,这些障碍都需要克服。