Fri 1110 Jackson-Cook - Association of Genetic Technologists
Transcription
Fri 1110 Jackson-Cook - Association of Genetic Technologists
6/6/2015 Studies of Discordant Identical Twins Reveal the Presence of Acquired Chromosomal Instability & Epigenetic Alterations C. Jackson-Cook, PhD, FACMG Virginia Commonwealth University Departments of Pathology and Human & Molecular Genetics Richmond, VA Twins Identical •1 in 250 births Tia & Tamera Mowry Fraternal •Race (1 in 80-100) •Heredity (♀ 1 in 58; ♂1 in 116) Mary-Kate & Ashley Olsen Michael & Ashton Kutcher •Fertility Drugs (20%-40%) •Age •Number of Previous Pregnancies Patricia & Giselle Bundchen Hunter & Scarlett Johansson 1 6/6/2015 Types of Twins Identical Twins "Placentation" by Kevin Dufendach - Licensed under CC BY 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons Maria & Teresa Tapia separated by team VCUHS in 2011 Castillo-Fernandez et al. Genome Medicine 2014 6:60 doi:10.1186/s13073-014-0060-z 2 6/6/2015 Twin Studies to quantify genetic and environmental influences on a trait ACE Model Qihua Tan et al. J Exp Biol 2015;218:134-139 Sources of Variation in Twin Studies Primary Study Aim To measure the frequency of acquired chromosomal abnormalities and chromosomespecific telomere lengths in twins and to determine the extent to which the variation in the frequency of these traits is determined by genetics and/or environment. PI: Jackson-Cook (NIH R01ES12074) 3 6/6/2015 Chromosomal changes with aging What is Known? •Acquired sex chromosomal changes seen •Acquired chromosomal changes are associated with age-related human diseases •Telomeres shorten with normal cellular aging Telomere (TTAGGG)n A specialized structure at the ends of eukaryotyic chromosomes. Maintain chromosomal integrity by preventing end-to-end fusion of chromosomes. Chromosomal changes with aging What is Not Known? •Do most acquired chromosomal changes arise from environmental insults, or are they “programmed” to occur as a result of an individual’s genetic make-up? •Are chromosomes with longer or shorter telomeres involved more often in age-related chromosomal changes? •Can telomere lengths or acquired chromosomal abnormality frequencies be used as a screening tool for the early detection and possibly enhanced treatment of health conditions? 4 6/6/2015 Twin Ascertainment Mid-Atlantic Twin Registry •220 twin pairs •Ascertained through MATR •Ages 6 to 80+ •Males (40%) and females (60%) •Monozygotic & same sex dizygotic (1) Blood sample (b) Uncultured Blood Smear (a) Cultured Lymphocytes (1 ) Standard GTG-banding (2) FISH for aneuploidy FISH for aneuploidy (2) Buccal Smear (3) FISH for chromosome-specific telomere lengths FISH for aneuploidy Cytokinesis Block Micronucleus (MN) and Cytome Assay Cytokinesis Block MN/Cytome Assay 5 6/6/2015 Micronuclei frequency Mean micronuclei frequency 35 Males 30 Females 25 20 15 10 5 0 7yrs9yrs 10yrs19yrs 20yrs29yrs 30yrs39yrs 40yrs49yrs 50yrs59yrs 60yrs69yrs 70yrs79yrs 80yrs+ Genetic vs environmental influences Decreased Frequency Green, leafy vegetables (p<0.001) Fruit (p=0.14) Folate-enriched bread (p=0.035) Vitamin D (males)(p=0.044) 34.8% Arthritis (p=0.002) Increased Frequency Multi-vitamins (p=0.041) Vitamin E (p=0.01) 65.2% Tobacco (females)(p=0.001) Allergies (p=0.001) Migraines (p=0.026) Frequency of Chromosome-Specific Somatic Cell “Numerical” Changes 6 6/6/2015 Types of changes acquired with aging * * Acquired copy number changes with aging Acquired aneuploidy is a complex trait 7 6/6/2015 Acquired CNVs with aging Cancerfree All Solid tumors From: Machiela, et al., 2015, AJHG 96 (3): 487 - 497 (G=Gain; B=LOH; R=Loss) Epigenetic Patterns in MZ Twins From: Fraga, et al. (2005) Epigenetic differences arise during the lifetime of monozygotic twins. PNAS 102: 10604-10609. Epigenetics Wikipedia The study of heritable changes in phenotype (appearance) or gene expression caused by mechanisms other than changes in the underlying DNA sequence, hence the name epi- (Greek: επί- over, above) -genetics. These changes may remain through cell divisions for the remainder of the cell's life and may also last for multiple generations. However, there is no change in the underlying DNA sequence of the organism;[1] instead, non-genetic factors cause the organism's genes to behave (or "express themselves") differently.[2] 8 6/6/2015 . . Breaker . . or Breaker . . Breaker Main Power Supply . Brighter . Dimmer Breaker Genotypic variation important in gene expression and modulating effects of “environmental” exposure From Szyf M, Weaver I, Meaney M (2007) Reprod Toxicol 24: 9-19. Discordance in MZ twins Zwijnenburg PJG, et al. (2010) Am J Med Genet 153B (6): 1134-1149. From: Dongen, et al. (2012) Nat Rev Genet 13 (9): 640-653 9 6/6/2015 Concordant or Discordant Twins From: Bell JT, Spector TD (2011) Trends in Genetics 27: 116-125. Epigenetic Changes in animals Weaver,et al. (2004) Maternal nurturing induced epigenetic changes in glucocorticoid receptor gene expression in offspring; reversible with cross-fostering •Diet •Environment •Maternal nurturing •Stress How are traumatic events experienced in childhood biologically remembered to cause morbidity and mortality later in life? 10 6/6/2015 Epigenetic, Telomere & Chromosome Changes in Adult Twins Having Child Adversity Multi PIs: C Jackson-Cook and TP York (NIH R01 AG037986) Jerry Sandusky, former Penn State football coach, was found guilty of 45 counts of childhood sexual abuse in 2012 Childhood Sexual Abuse •1 in 4 girls; 1 in 6 boys (Botash, 1997) •Psychological and physiological impact (Brown et al., 2009; Miller et al. 2009) •Adults who were abused die nearly 20 years earlier (Miller et al., 2009) Biological Cascade 11 6/6/2015 Hypothesis There are differences in the frequency and genomic location of epigenetic and DNA‐based changes that are present in adult twins who have a history of childhood sexual abuse, when compared to their genetically identical co‐twins, who were not abused. Ascertainment of Discordant Identical Twins Kendler, et al. 2003 Population-based sample female adult twins n=1942 Returned health questionnaire n = 1411 No response n = 531 MZ Pairs both providing CSA info n= 326 Discordant n = 74 Age at abuse: 10.2 ± 3.5 Current age: 40-55 Contacted 40 pairs n = 22 pairs Concordant n=252 Positive controls (Concordant Pairs) Negative controls (Healthy Twins) Aim 1: Is there a difference in the frequency of acquired chromosomal changes present in adult identical twins discordant for a history of CSA? Cytokinesis Block MN/Cytome Assay 12 6/6/2015 35 30 25 20 15 0 5 10 Micronucleus Frequency 40 45 50 Micronuclei Frequencies Higher in Abused Twins Reference CSA nonexposed CSA exposed p<0.001 p=0.009 4 5 5 0 Difference between co-twins more pronounced with age p=0.0006 3 5 3 0 2 5 2 0 1 5 0 5 1 0 M icro n u cle u sF re q u e n cy 4 0 CSA Discordant Exposed CSA Discordant Nonexposed 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 Age at Blood Draw Biological age of CSA+ twins 9.9 years older than CSA- identical co-twin Is the observed increase in MN frequency due to more of the same chromosomal abnormalities or are there differences in the chromatin present in MN for the CSA+ compared to CSA- identical co-twins? - Spectral Karyotyping Telophase Cyt B Block Metaphase •100 MN/twin Anaphase - 2N Diploid Interphase Cell 2N-1 Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cyt B Block - 2N-1 Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cyt B Block 13 6/6/2015 % Total Observations No significant difference in the pattern of chromatin present in MN was detected between CSA+ and CSA- twins 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 X Mix Chromosomes CSA No CSA Aim 2: Is there is a difference in the telomere lengths of adult identical twins who are discordant for a history of CSA? Scoring •Telomere average of 20 homologs/10 metaphase spreads Difference in Mean Telomere Intensity Telomere intensity scores in women experiencing CSA involving intercourse tended to be less than those of their unexposed identical co-twins p=0.06 p=0.803 p=0.98 p=0.98 14 Co-twin Difference in Telomere Signal Intensity 6/6/2015 Aim 3: Do identical twin pairs discordant for CSA have more epigenetic differences than concordant CSAidentical pairs? HumanMethylation450 Figure from Illumina Website Age: 55 A: 30 B: 19.5 Age: 68 A: 15 B: 15 Conclusions •MN frequency significantly increased in CSA+ twins compared to CSA- identical co-twins Difference between co-twins increases with age No clear difference in pattern of chromosomes present in MN •Significant chromosome-specific telomeric attrition noted in twins experiencing intercourse compared to their CSAidentical co-twins Telomeres with greatest difference: 1q, 3p & 3q, 4q, 5p, 6p, 8p, 11q, 13q No clear trend for attrition for other forms of CSA •Differences in methylation patterns are acquired between co-twins with greater divergence seen in twins discordant for CSA 15 6/6/2015 Acquired traits associated with trisomy 21 • How early do the biological changes arise that are associated with premature aging? • Do biological changes result from alterations involving genes not only on chromosome 21, but also genes or gene networks localized to other chromosomes? • Could early recognition of symptoms or genetic/epigenetic biomarkers for aging allow for the development of more effective interventions or treatments? • Can knowledge gained about alterations leading to premature aging in Ds be exploited to inform scientists about the biological cascade of factors influencing aging in all people? Challenges to research Chromosome 21 Environment Genes not associated with chromosome 21 Mitochondrial genes Studies of cells/DNA/RNA from individuals with mosaicism can help to recognize effects of trisomy 21 16 6/6/2015 Studies of cells from individuals with mosaicism provide unique vision Chromosome 21 Environment Genes not associated with chromosome 21 Mitochondrial genes Studies of cells from individuals with mosaicism provide unique vision Chromosome 21 Environment Genes not associated with chromosome 21 Mitochondrial genes Studies of cells from individuals with mosaicism provide unique vision Chromosome 21 Environment Genes not associated with chromosome 21 Mitochondrial genes 17 6/6/2015 Studies of cells from individuals with mosaicism provide unique vision Chromosome 21 Environment Genes not associated with chromosome 21 Mitochondrial genes •May provide tool(s) for recognizing “at risk” individuals •Reversibility of epigenetic marks gives promise for treatment “Nature” versus “Nurture” Francis Galton “Nature” modulated by “Nurture” The (TTAGGG)n 18 6/6/2015 Acknowledgements Grant: RO1 AG037986 Timothy P. York Jenni Brumelle Kaitlyn Dochelli Virginia Anne Hagood Kenneth S. Kendler Lindon J. Eaves Ananda Amstadter Grant: R01 ES12074 Kimberly Jones Trisomy 21/DS Mosaicism Project Kellie Archer Kelly Rafferty Chariyawan Charalsawadi Discordant Identical Twins to Identify Acquired Epigenetic Alterations Roos, et al., (2014) Epigenomics 6(3): 299-309. 19