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Brain cell type-specific enhancer-promoter interactome maps and diseaserisk association.

Citation
Nott, A., et al. “Brain Cell Type-Specific Enhancer-Promoter Interactome Maps And Diseaserisk Association.”. Science (New York, N.y.), pp. 1134-1139.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Alexi Nott, Inge R Holtman, Nicole G Coufal, Johannes C M Schlachetzki, Miao Yu, Rong Hu, Claudia Z Han, Monique Pena, Jiayang Xiao, Yin Wu, Zahara Keulen, Martina P Pasillas, Carolyn O'Connor, Christian K Nickl, Simon T Schafer, Zeyang Shen, Robert A Rissman, James B Brewer, David Gosselin, David D Gonda, Michael L Levy, Michael G Rosenfeld, Graham McVicker, Fred H Gage, Bing Ren, Christopher K Glass
Abstract

Noncoding genetic variation is a major driver of phenotypic diversity, but functional interpretation is challenging. To better understand common genetic variation associated with brain diseases, we defined noncoding regulatory regions for major cell types of the human brain. Whereas psychiatric disorders were primarily associated with variants in transcriptional enhancers and promoters in neurons, sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) variants were largely confined to microglia enhancers. Interactome maps connecting disease-risk variants in cell-type-specific enhancers to promoters revealed an extended microglia gene network in AD. Deletion of a microglia-specific enhancer harboring AD-risk variants ablated expression in microglia, but not in neurons or astrocytes. These findings revise and expand the list of genes likely to be influenced by noncoding variants in AD and suggest the probable cell types in which they function.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Volume
366
Issue
6469
Number of Pages
1134-1139
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1095-9203
DOI
10.1126/science.aay0793
Alternate Journal
Science
PMID
31727856
PMCID
PMC7028213
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