Aslihan Dincer
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Publication
Featured researches published by Aslihan Dincer.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013
Rahul Bharadwaj; Yan Jiang; Wenjie Mao; Mira Jakovcevski; Aslihan Dincer; Winfried Krueger; Krassimira A. Garbett; Catheryne Whittle; Jogender S. Tushir; Jia Liu; Adolfo Sequeira; Marquis P. Vawter; Paul D. Gardner; Patrizia Casaccia; Theodore P. Rasmussen; William E. Bunney; Karoly Mirnics; Kensuke Futai; Schahram Akbarian
Little is known about chromosomal loopings involving proximal promoter and distal enhancer elements regulating GABAergic gene expression, including changes in schizophrenia and other psychiatric conditions linked to altered inhibition. Here, we map in human chromosome 2q31 the 3D configuration of 200 kb of linear sequence encompassing the GAD1 GABA synthesis enzyme gene locus, and we describe a loop formation involving the GAD1 transcription start site and intergenic noncoding DNA elements facilitating reporter gene expression. The GAD1-TSS-50kbLoop was enriched with nucleosomes epigenetically decorated with the transcriptional mark, histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 4, and was weak or absent in skin fibroblasts and pluripotent stem cells compared with neuronal cultures differentiated from them. In the prefrontal cortex of subjects with schizophrenia, GAD1-TSS-50kbLoop was decreased compared with controls, in conjunction with downregulated GAD1 expression. We generated transgenic mice expressing Gad2 promoter-driven green fluorescent protein-conjugated histone H2B and confirmed that Gad1-TSS-55kbLoop, the murine homolog to GAD1-TSS-50kbLoop, is a chromosomal conformation specific for GABAergic neurons. In primary neuronal culture, Gad1-TSS-55kbLoop and Gad1 expression became upregulated when neuronal activity was increased. We conclude that 3D genome architectures, including chromosomal loopings for promoter-enhancer interactions involved in the regulation of GABAergic gene expression, are conserved between the rodent and primate brain, and subject to developmental and activity-dependent regulation, and disordered in some cases with schizophrenia. More broadly, the findings presented here draw a connection between noncoding DNA, spatial genome architecture, and neuronal plasticity in development and disease.
Biological Psychiatry | 2016
Cyril J. Peter; Laura K. Fischer; Marija Kundakovic; Paras Garg; Mira Jakovcevski; Aslihan Dincer; Ana C. Amaral; Edward I. Ginns; Marzena Galdzicka; Cyralene P. Bryce; Chana Ratner; Deborah P. Waber; David J. Mokler; Gayle Medford; Frances A. Champagne; Douglas L. Rosene; Jill A. McGaughy; Andrew J. Sharp; Janina R. Galler; Schahram Akbarian
BACKGROUND Early childhood malnutrition affects 113 million children worldwide, impacting health and increasing vulnerability for cognitive and behavioral disorders later in life. Molecular signatures after childhood malnutrition, including the potential for intergenerational transmission, remain unexplored. METHODS We surveyed blood DNA methylomes (~483,000 individual CpG sites) in 168 subjects across two generations, including 50 generation 1 individuals hospitalized during the first year of life for moderate to severe protein-energy malnutrition, then followed up to 48 years in the Barbados Nutrition Study. Attention deficits and cognitive performance were evaluated with the Connors Adult Attention Rating Scale and Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence. Expression of nutrition-sensitive genes was explored by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in rat prefrontal cortex. RESULTS We identified 134 nutrition-sensitive, differentially methylated genomic regions, with most (87%) specific for generation 1. Multiple neuropsychiatric risk genes, including COMT, IFNG, MIR200B, SYNGAP1, and VIPR2 showed associations of specific methyl-CpGs with attention and IQ. IFNG expression was decreased in prefrontal cortex of rats showing attention deficits after developmental malnutrition. CONCLUSIONS Early childhood malnutrition entails long-lasting epigenetic signatures associated with liability for attention and cognition, and limited potential for intergenerational transmission.
Translational Psychiatry | 2015
Aslihan Dincer; David P. Gavin; K Xu; Bin Zhang; Joel T. Dudley; Eric E. Schadt; Schahram Akbarian
Regulators of the histone H3-trimethyl lysine-4 (H3K4me3) mark are significantly associated with the genetic risk architecture of common neurodevelopmental disease, including schizophrenia and autism. Typical H3K4me3 is primarily localized in the form of sharp peaks, extending in neuronal chromatin on average only across 500–1500 base pairs mostly in close proximity to annotated transcription start sites. Here, through integrative computational analysis of epigenomic and transcriptomic data based on next-generation sequencing, we investigated H3K4me3 landscapes of sorted neuronal and non-neuronal nuclei in human postmortem, non-human primate and mouse prefrontal cortex (PFC), and blood. To explore whether H3K4me3 peak signals could also extend across much broader domains, we examined broadest domain cell-type-specific H3K4me3 peaks in an unbiased manner with an innovative approach on 41+12 ChIP-seq and RNA-seq data sets. In PFC neurons, broadest H3K4me3 distribution ranged from 3.9 to 12 kb, with extremely broad peaks (~10 kb or broader) related to synaptic function and GABAergic signaling (DLX1, ELFN1, GAD1, IGSF9B and LINC00966). Broadest neuronal peaks showed distinct motif signatures and were centrally positioned in prefrontal gene-regulatory Bayesian networks and sensitive to defective neurodevelopment. Approximately 120 of the broadest H3K4me3 peaks in human PFC neurons, including many genes related to glutamatergic and dopaminergic signaling, were fully conserved in chimpanzee, macaque and mouse cortical neurons. Exploration of spread and breadth of lysine methylation markings could provide novel insights into epigenetic mechanism involved in neuropsychiatric disease and neuronal genome evolution.
Biological Psychiatry | 2017
Marija Kundakovic; Yan Jiang; David H. Kavanagh; Aslihan Dincer; Leanne Brown; Venu Pothula; Elizabeth Zharovsky; Royce Park; Rivka Jacobov; Isabelle Magro; Bibi S. Kassim; Jennifer Wiseman; Kristen Dang; Solveig K. Sieberts; Panos Roussos; Menachem Fromer; Brent T. Harris; Barbara K. Lipska; Mette A. Peters; Pamela Sklar; Schahram Akbarian
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.
Schizophrenia Research | 2016
Tobias Halene; Alexey Kozlenkov; Yan Jiang; Amanda C. Mitchell; Behnam Javidfar; Aslihan Dincer; Royce Park; Jennifer Wiseman; Paula L. Croxson; Eustathia Lela Giannaris; Patrick R. Hof; Panos Roussos; Stella Dracheva; Scott E. Hemby; Schahram Akbarian
Increased neuronal densities in subcortical white matter have been reported for some cases with schizophrenia. The underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain unresolved. We exposed 26 young adult macaque monkeys for 6 months to either clozapine, haloperidol or placebo and measured by structural MRI frontal gray and white matter volumes before and after treatment, followed by observer-independent, flow-cytometry-based quantification of neuronal and non-neuronal nuclei and molecular fingerprinting of cell-type specific transcripts. After clozapine exposure, the proportion of nuclei expressing the neuronal marker NeuN increased by approximately 50% in subcortical white matter, in conjunction with a more subtle and non-significant increase in overlying gray matter. Numbers and proportions of nuclei expressing the oligodendrocyte lineage marker, OLIG2, and cell-type specific RNA expression patterns, were maintained after antipsychotic drug exposure. Frontal lobe gray and white matter volumes remained indistinguishable between antipsychotic-drug-exposed and control groups. Chronic clozapine exposure increases the proportion of NeuN+ nuclei in frontal subcortical white matter, without alterations in frontal lobe volumes or cell type-specific gene expression. Further exploration of neurochemical plasticity in non-human primate brain exposed to antipsychotic drugs is warranted.
Mechanisms of Development | 2017
Aslihan Dincer; Bin Zhang; Joel T. Dudley; David P. Gavin; Eric E. Schadt; Schahram Akbarian
Both biotic and abiotic stress experienced by plants, is known to affect the genome integrity and can persist in the ensuing generation suggesting that environmental experiences are recorded and transmitted. Some of the features of transgenerational memory include elevated genome instability and a higher tolerance to stress in the offsprings. Although such non-DNA sequence based inheritance is described in a range of model organisms, the mechanisms are not clear. Here, we wanted to examine if the reproductive age affects the somatic mutation rates in the transgenerational progeny. We used transgenic plant Arabidopsis, carrying mutated and truncated βglucuronidase based gene construct, where reversion of the mutated/truncated sequence back to restore the functional GUS reading frame which allow quantification of point mutation (PMR) and homologous recombination rates (SHR) respectively. We found that SHR were significant in parents derived from four different age groups i.e.38, 43, 48, and 53 Days after sowing (DAS) of grandparents and SHR were highest from plants of all ages derived from the 48 DAS grandparents. If grand parental age at reproduction is fixed, the SHR were the same among all four different age groups of parents. For two consecutive generations, the SHR were the same from age groups (38 and 43 DAS) of grandparents and great grandparents but significantly decreased at 48 DAS age group in great grandparental generation. When the plants were self-pollinated at 43, 48 and 53 DAS, the PMR increased with the increase in grandparent age and the highest PMR were from 48 DAS plants, but in 38 DAS plants the PMR decreased with the increase in grandparent age. When grandparental age at pollination was fixed at 38 and 43 DAS, the point PMR decreased significantly with the increase in parent age, but in 48 DAS it increased significantly with increase in parent age.
Schizophrenia Research | 2012
Caroline M. Connor; Aslihan Dincer; Juerg R. Straubhaar; Janina R. Galler; Isaac B. Houston; Schahram Akbarian
Experimental Neurology | 2015
Erica Y. Shen; Todd H. Ahern; Iris Cheung; Juerg R. Straubhaar; Aslihan Dincer; Isaac B. Houston; Geert J. De Vries; Schahram Akbarian; Nancy G. Forger
Neuron | 2014
Rahul Bharadwaj; Cyril J. Peter; Yan Jiang; Panos Roussos; Annie Vogel-Ciernia; Erica Y. Shen; Amanda C. Mitchell; Wenjie Mao; Catheryne Whittle; Aslihan Dincer; Mira Jakovcevski; Venu Pothula; Theodore P. Rasmussen; Stella G. Giakoumaki; Panos Bitsios; Ajfar Sherif; Paul D. Gardner; Patricia Ernst; Subroto Ghose; Pamela Sklar; Vahram Haroutunian; Carol A. Tamminga; Richard H. Myers; Kensuke Futai; Marcelo A. Wood; Schahram Akbarian
Biological Psychiatry | 2017
Aslihan Dincer; Eric E. Schadt; David P. Gavin; Joel T. Dudley; Bin Zhang; Schahram Akbarian