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Featured researches published by Elodie Drapeau.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2017

Autism spectrum disorder: neuropathology and animal models

Merina Varghese; Neha Keshav; Sarah Jacot-Descombes; Tahia Warda; Bridget Wicinski; Dara L. Dickstein; Hala Harony-Nicolas; Silvia De Rubeis; Elodie Drapeau; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Patrick R. Hof

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has a major impact on the development and social integration of affected individuals and is the most heritable of psychiatric disorders. An increase in the incidence of ASD cases has prompted a surge in research efforts on the underlying neuropathologic processes. We present an overview of current findings in neuropathology studies of ASD using two investigational approaches, postmortem human brains and ASD animal models, and discuss the overlap, limitations, and significance of each. Postmortem examination of ASD brains has revealed global changes including disorganized gray and white matter, increased number of neurons, decreased volume of neuronal soma, and increased neuropil, the last reflecting changes in densities of dendritic spines, cerebral vasculature and glia. Both cortical and non-cortical areas show region-specific abnormalities in neuronal morphology and cytoarchitectural organization, with consistent findings reported from the prefrontal cortex, fusiform gyrus, frontoinsular cortex, cingulate cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, cerebellum and brainstem. The paucity of postmortem human studies linking neuropathology to the underlying etiology has been partly addressed using animal models to explore the impact of genetic and non-genetic factors clinically relevant for the ASD phenotype. Genetically modified models include those based on well-studied monogenic ASD genes (NLGN3, NLGN4, NRXN1, CNTNAP2, SHANK3, MECP2, FMR1, TSC1/2), emerging risk genes (CHD8, SCN2A, SYNGAP1, ARID1B, GRIN2B, DSCAM, TBR1), and copy number variants (15q11-q13 deletion, 15q13.3 microdeletion, 15q11-13 duplication, 16p11.2 deletion and duplication, 22q11.2 deletion). Models of idiopathic ASD include inbred rodent strains that mimic ASD behaviors as well as models developed by environmental interventions such as prenatal exposure to sodium valproate, maternal autoantibodies, and maternal immune activation. In addition to replicating some of the neuropathologic features seen in postmortem studies, a common finding in several animal models of ASD is altered density of dendritic spines, with the direction of the change depending on the specific genetic modification, age and brain region. Overall, postmortem neuropathologic studies with larger sample sizes representative of the various ASD risk genes and diverse clinical phenotypes are warranted to clarify putative etiopathogenic pathways further and to promote the emergence of clinically relevant diagnostic and therapeutic tools. In addition, as genetic alterations may render certain individuals more vulnerable to developing the pathological changes at the synapse underlying the behavioral manifestations of ASD, neuropathologic investigation using genetically modified animal models will help to improve our understanding of the disease mechanisms and enhance the development of targeted treatments.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2014

Absence of strong strain effects in behavioral analyses of Shank3-deficient mice

Elodie Drapeau; Nate P. Dorr; Gregory A. Elder; Joseph D. Buxbaum

Haploinsufficiency of SHANK3, caused by chromosomal abnormalities or mutations that disrupt one copy of the gene, leads to a neurodevelopmental syndrome called Phelan-McDermid syndrome, symptoms of which can include absent or delayed speech, intellectual disability, neurological changes and autism spectrum disorders. The SHANK3 protein forms a key structural part of the post-synaptic density. We previously generated and characterized mice with a targeted disruption of Shank3 in which exons coding for the ankyrin-repeat domain were deleted and expression of full-length Shank3 was disrupted. We documented specific deficits in synaptic function and plasticity, along with reduced reciprocal social interactions, in Shank3 heterozygous mice. Changes in phenotype owing to a mutation at a single locus are quite frequently modulated by other loci, most dramatically when the entire genetic background is changed. In mice, each strain of laboratory mouse represents a distinct genetic background and alterations in phenotype owing to gene knockout or transgenesis are frequently different across strains, which can lead to the identification of important modifier loci. We have investigated the effect of genetic background on phenotypes of Shank3 heterozygous, knockout and wild-type mice, using C57BL/6, 129SVE and FVB/Ntac strain backgrounds. We focused on observable behaviors with the goal of carrying out subsequent analyses to identify modifier loci. Surprisingly, there were very modest strain effects over a large battery of analyses. These results indicate that behavioral phenotypes associated with Shank3 haploinsufficiency are largely strain-independent.


Annals of Neurology | 2014

PLXNA4 is associated with Alzheimer disease and modulates tau phosphorylation

Gyungah Jun; Hirohide Asai; Ella Zeldich; Elodie Drapeau; Ci-Di Chen; Jaeyoon Chung; Jong Ho Park; Sehwa Kim; Vahram Haroutunian; Tatiana Foroud; Ryozo Kuwano; Jonathan L. Haines; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Jong-Won Kim; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Richard Mayeux; Tsuneya Ikezu; Carmela R. Abraham; Lindsay A. Farrer

Much of the genetic basis for Alzheimer disease (AD) is unexplained. We sought to identify novel AD loci using a unique family‐based approach that can detect robust associations with infrequent variants (minor allele frequency < 0.10).


JAMA Psychiatry | 2016

Evidence for Genetic Overlap Between Schizophrenia and Age at First Birth in Women

Divya Mehta; Felix C. Tropf; Jacob Gratten; Andrew Bakshi; Zhihong Zhu; Silviu-Alin Bacanu; Gibran Hemani; Patrik K. E. Magnusson; Nicola Barban; Tonu Esko; Andres Metspalu; Harold Snieder; Bryan J. Mowry; Kenneth S. Kendler; Jian Yang; Peter M. Visscher; John J. McGrath; Melinda Mills; Naomi R. Wray; S. Hong Lee; Ole A. Andreassen; Elvira Bramon; Richard Bruggeman; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Murray J. Cairns; Rita M. Cantor; C. Robert Cloninger; David Cohen; Benedicto Crespo-Facorro; Ariel Darvasi

IMPORTANCE A recently published study of national data by McGrath et al in 2014 showed increased risk of schizophrenia (SCZ) in offspring associated with both early and delayed parental age, consistent with a U-shaped relationship. However, it remains unclear if the risk to the child is due to psychosocial factors associated with parental age or if those at higher risk for SCZ tend to have children at an earlier or later age. OBJECTIVE To determine if there is a genetic association between SCZ and age at first birth (AFB) using genetically informative but independently ascertained data sets. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This investigation used multiple independent genome-wide association study data sets. The SCZ sample comprised 18 957 SCZ cases and 22 673 controls in a genome-wide association study from the second phase of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, and the AFB sample comprised 12 247 genotyped women measured for AFB from the following 4 community cohorts: Estonia (Estonian Genome Center Biobank, University of Tartu), the Netherlands (LifeLines Cohort Study), Sweden (Swedish Twin Registry), and the United Kingdom (TwinsUK). Schizophrenia genetic risk for each woman in the AFB community sample was estimated using genetic effects inferred from the SCZ genome-wide association study. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES We tested if SCZ genetic risk was a significant predictor of response variables based on published polynomial functions that described the relationship between maternal age and SCZ risk in offspring in Denmark. We substituted AFB for maternal age in these functions, one of which was corrected for the age of the father, and found that the fit was superior for the model without adjustment for the fathers age. RESULTS We observed a U-shaped relationship between SCZ risk and AFB in the community cohorts, consistent with the previously reported relationship between SCZ risk in offspring and maternal age when not adjusted for the age of the father. We confirmed that SCZ risk profile scores significantly predicted the response variables (coefficient of determination R2 = 1.1E-03, P = 4.1E-04), reflecting the published relationship between maternal age and SCZ risk in offspring by McGrath et al in 2014. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This study provides evidence for a significant overlap between genetic factors associated with risk of SCZ and genetic factors associated with AFB. It has been reported that SCZ risk associated with increased maternal age is explained by the age of the father and that de novo mutations that occur more frequently in the germline of older men are the underlying causal mechanism. This explanation may need to be revised if, as suggested herein and if replicated in future studies, there is also increased genetic risk of SCZ in older mothers.


bioRxiv | 2018

Behavioral Phenotyping of an Improved Mouse Model of Phelan-McDermid Syndrome with a Complete Deletion of the Shank3 Gene

Elodie Drapeau; Mohammed Riad; Yuji Kajiwara; Joseph D. Buxbaum

Abstract Phelan–McDermid syndrome (PMS) is a rare genetic disorder in which one copy of the SHANK3 gene is missing or mutated, leading to a global developmental delay, intellectual disability (ID), and autism. Multiple intragenic promoters and alternatively spliced exons are responsible for the formation of numerous isoforms. Many genetically-modified mouse models of PMS have been generated but most disrupt only some of the isoforms. In contrast, the vast majority of known SHANK3 mutations found in patients involve deletions that disrupt all isoforms. Here, we report the production and thorough behavioral characterization of a new mouse model in which all Shank3 isoforms are disrupted. Domains and tasks examined in adults included measures of general health, neurological reflexes, motor abilities, sensory reactivity, social behavior, repetitive behaviors, cognition and behavioral inflexibility, and anxiety. Our mice are more severely affected than previously published models. While the deficits were typically more pronounced in homozygotes, an intermediate phenotype was observed for heterozygotes in many paradigms. As in other Shank3 mouse models, stereotypies, including increased grooming, were observed. Additionally, sensory alterations were detected in both neonatal and adult mice, and motor behavior was strongly altered, especially in the open field and rotarod locomotor tests. While social behaviors measured with the three-chambered social approach and male-female interaction tests were not strongly impacted, Shank3-deficient mice displayed a strong escape behavior and avoidance of inanimate objects in novel object recognition, repetitive novel object contact, marble burying, and nest building tasks, indicating increased novelty-induced anxiety. Similarly, increased freezing was observed during fear conditioning training and amygdala-dependent cued retrieval. Finally, deficits were observed in both initial training and reversal in the Barnes maze and in contextual fear testing, which are memory tasks involving hippocampal-prefrontal circuits. In contrast, working memory in the Y-maze spontaneous alternation test was not altered. This new mouse model of PMS, engineered to most closely represent human mutations, recapitulates core symptoms of PMS providing improvements for both construct and face validity, compared to previous models.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Identification of Small Exonic CNV from Whole-Exome Sequence Data and Application to Autism Spectrum Disorder

Christopher S. Poultney; Arthur P. Goldberg; Elodie Drapeau; Yan Kou; Hala Harony-Nicolas; Yuji Kajiwara; Silvia De Rubeis; Simon Durand; Christine Stevens; Karola Rehnström; Aarno Palotie; Mark J. Daly; Avi Ma’ayan; Menachem Fromer; Joseph D. Buxbaum


eLife | 2016

Regulatory consequences of neuronal ELAV-like protein binding to coding and non-coding RNAs in human brain

Claudia Scheckel; Elodie Drapeau; Maria A Frias; Christopher Y. Park; John J. Fak; Ilana Zucker-Scharff; Yan Kou; Vahram Haroutunian; Avi Ma'ayan; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Robert B. Darnell


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2013

Genetic variation in PLXNA4 associated with susceptibility of Alzheimer’s disease through tau phosphorylation

Gyungah Jun; Hirohide Asai; Elodie Drapeau; Jong-Ho Park; Ella Zeldich; Ci-Di Chen; Sehwa Kim; Tatiana Foroud; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Jong-Won Kim; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Carmela R. Abraham; Tsuneya Ikezu; Richard Mayeux; Lindsay Farrer

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Joseph D. Buxbaum

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Hala Harony-Nicolas

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Silvia De Rubeis

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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