Practical Guidelines for High-Resolution Epigenomic Profiling of Nucleosomal Histones in Postmortem Human Brain Tissue

Abstract Background The nervous system may include more than 100 residue-specific posttranslational modifications of histones forming the nucleosome core that are often regulated in cell-type-specific manner. On a genome-wide scale, some of the histone posttranslational modification landscapes show...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychiatry (1969) 2017-01, Vol.81 (2), p.162-170
Hauptverfasser: Kundakovic, Marija, Jiang, Yan, Kavanagh, David H, Dincer, Aslihan, Brown, Leanne, Pothula, Venu, Zharovsky, Elizabeth, Park, Royce, Jacobov, Rivka, Magro, Isabelle, Kassim, Bibi, Wiseman, Jennifer, Dang, Kristen, Sieberts, Solveig K, Roussos, Panos, Fromer, Menachem, Harris, Brent, Lipska, Barbara K, Peters, Mette A, Sklar, Pamela, Akbarian, Schahram
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background The nervous system may include more than 100 residue-specific posttranslational modifications of histones forming the nucleosome core that are often regulated in cell-type-specific manner. On a genome-wide scale, some of the histone posttranslational modification landscapes show significant overlap with the genetic risk architecture for several psychiatric disorders, fueling PsychENCODE and other large-scale efforts to comprehensively map neuronal and nonneuronal epigenomes in hundreds of specimens. However, practical guidelines for efficient generation of histone chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) datasets from postmortem brains are needed. Methods Protocols and quality controls are given for the following: 1) extraction, purification, and NeuN neuronal marker immunotagging of nuclei from adult human cerebral cortex; 2) fluorescence-activated nuclei sorting; 3) preparation of chromatin by micrococcal nuclease digest; 4) ChIP for open chromatin-associated histone methylation and acetylation; and 5) generation and sequencing of ChIP-seq libraries. Results We present a ChIP-seq pipeline for epigenome mapping in the neuronal and nonneuronal nuclei from the postmortem brain. This includes a stepwise system of quality controls and user-friendly data presentation platforms. Conclusions Our practical guidelines will be useful for projects aimed at histone posttranslational modification mapping in chromatin extracted from hundreds of postmortem brain samples in cell-type-specific manner.
ISSN:0006-3223
1873-2402
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsych.2016.03.1048