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Featured researches published by Gilles Maussion.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2012

Genome-wide epigenetic regulation by early-life trauma

Benoit Labonté; Matt Suderman; Gilles Maussion; Luis Navaro; Volodymyr Yerko; Ian Mahar; Alexandre Bureau; Naguib Mechawar; Moshe Szyf; Michael J. Meaney; Gustavo Turecki

CONTEXT Our genome adapts to environmental influences, in part through epigenetic mechanisms, including DNA methylation. Variations in the quality of the early environment are associated with alterations in DNA methylation in rodents, and recent data suggest similar processes in humans in response to early-life adversity. OBJECTIVE To determine genome-wide DNA methylation alterations induced by early-life trauma. DESIGN Genome-wide study of promoter methylation in individuals with severe abuse during childhood. PATIENTS, SETTING, AND MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Promoter DNA methylation levels were profiled using methylated DNA immunoprecipitation followed by microarray hybridization in hippocampal tissue from 41 French-Canadian men (25 with a history of severe childhood abuse and 16 control subjects). Methylation profiles were compared with corresponding genome-wide gene expression profiles obtained by messenger RNA microarrays. Methylation differences between groups were validated on neuronal and nonneuronal DNA fractions isolated by fluorescence-assisted cell sorting. Functional consequences of site-specific promoter methylation were assessed by luciferase assays. RESULTS We identified 362 differentially methylated promoters in individuals with a history of abuse compared with controls. Among these promoters, 248 showed hypermethylation and 114 demonstrated hypomethylation. Validation and site-specific quantification of DNA methylation in the 5 most hypermethylated gene promoters indicated that methylation differences occurred mainly in the neuronal cellular fraction. Genes involved in cellular/neuronal plasticity were among the most significantly differentially methylated, and, among these, Alsin (ALS2) was the most significant finding. Methylated ALS2 constructs mimicking the methylation state in samples from abused suicide completers showed decreased promoter transcriptional activity associated with decreased hippocampal expression of ALS2 variants. CONCLUSION Childhood adversity is associated with epigenetic alterations in the promoters of several genes in hippocampal neurons.


Nature Medicine | 2014

miR-1202 is a primate-specific and brain-enriched microRNA involved in major depression and antidepressant treatment

Juan Pablo Lopez; Raymond S. Lim; Cristiana Cruceanu; Liam Crapper; Caroline Fasano; Benoit Labonté; Gilles Maussion; Jennie P. Yang; Volodymyr Yerko; Erika Vigneault; Salah El Mestikawy; Naguib Mechawar; Paul Pavlidis; Gustavo Turecki

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a prevalent mood disorder that is associated with differential prefrontal brain expression patterns. Treatment of MDD includes a variety of biopsychosocial approaches. In medical practice, antidepressant drugs are the most common treatment for depressive episodes, and they are among the most prescribed medications in North America. Although antidepressants are clearly effective, particularly for moderate to severe depressive episodes, there is variability in how individuals respond to antidepressant treatment. Failure to respond has individual, economic and social consequences for patients and their families. Several lines of evidence demonstrate that genes are regulated through the activity of microRNAs (miRNAs), which act as fine-tuners and on-off switches of gene expression. Here we report on complementary studies using postmortem human brain samples, cellular assays and samples from clinical trials of patients with depression and show that miR-1202, a miRNA specific to primates and enriched in the human brain, is differentially expressed in individuals with depression. Additionally, miR-1202 regulates expression of the gene encoding metabotropic glutamate receptor-4 (GRM4) and predicts antidepressant response at baseline. These results suggest that miR-1202 is associated with the pathophysiology of depression and is a potential target for new antidepressant treatments.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2013

Genome-Wide Methylation Changes in the Brains of Suicide Completers

Benoit Labonté; Matt Suderman; Gilles Maussion; Juan Pablo Lopez; Luis Navarro-Sánchez; Volodymyr Yerko; Naguib Mechawar; Moshe Szyf; Michael J. Meaney; Gustavo Turecki

OBJECTIVE Gene expression changes have been reported in the brains of suicide completers. More recently, differences in promoter DNA methylation between suicide completers and comparison subjects in specific genes have been associated with these changes in gene expression patterns, implicating DNA methylation alterations as a plausible component of the pathophysiology of suicide. The authors used a genome-wide approach to investigate the extent of DNA methylation alterations in the brains of suicide completers. METHOD Promoter DNA methylation was profiled using methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP) followed by microarray hybridization in hippocampal tissue from 62 men (46 suicide completers and 16 comparison subjects). The correlation between promoter methylation and expression was investigated by comparing the MeDIP data with gene expression profiles generated through mRNA microarray. Methylation differences between groups were validated on neuronal and nonneuronal DNA fractions isolated by fluorescence-assisted cell sorting. RESULTS The authors identified 366 promoters that were differentially methylated in suicide completers relative to comparison subjects (273 hypermethylated and 93 hypomethylated). Overall, promoter methylation differences were inversely correlated with gene expression differences. Functional annotation analyses revealed an enrichment of differential methylation in the promoters of genes involved, among other functions, in cognitive processes. Validation was performed on the top genes from this category, and these differences were found to occur mainly in the neuronal cell fraction. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest broad reprogramming of promoter DNA methylation patterns in the hippocampus of suicide completers. This may help explain gene expression alterations associated with suicide and possibly behavioral changes increasing suicide risk.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2011

Astrocytic hypertrophy in anterior cingulate white matter of depressed suicides.

Susana G. Torres-Platas; Christa Hercher; Maria Antonietta Davoli; Gilles Maussion; Benoit Labonté; Gustavo Turecki; Naguib Mechawar

Increasing evidence suggests that cortical astrocytic function is disrupted in mood disorders and suicide. The fine neuroanatomy of astrocytes, however, remains to be investigated in these psychiatric conditions. In this study, we performed a detailed morphometric analysis of 3D-reconstructed gray and white matter astrocytes in Golgi-impregnated anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) samples from depressed suicides and matched controls. Postmortem ACC samples (BA24) from 10 well-characterized depressed suicides and 10 matched sudden-death controls were obtained from the Quebec Suicide Brain Bank. Golgi-impregnated protoplasmic astrocytes (gray matter, layer VI) and fibrous astrocytes (adjacent white matter) were reconstructed, and their morphometric features were analyzed using the Neurolucida software. For each cell, the soma size as well as the number, length, and branching of processes were determined. The densities of thorny protrusions found along the processes of both astrocytic subtypes were also determined. Protoplasmic astrocytes showed no significant difference between groups for any of the quantified parameters. However, fibrous astrocytes had significantly larger cell bodies, as well as longer, more ramified processes in depressed suicides, with values for these parameters being about twice as high as those measured in controls. These results provide the first evidence of altered cortical astrocytic morphology in mood disorders. The presence of hypertrophic astrocytes in BA24 white matter is consistent with reports suggesting white matter alterations in depression, and provides further support to the neuroinflammatory theory of depression.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

SMARCA2 and other genome-wide supported schizophrenia-associated genes: regulation by REST/NRSF, network organization and primate-specific evolution

Yann Loe-Mie; Aude-Marie Lepagnol-Bestel; Gilles Maussion; Adi Doron-Faigenboim; Sandrine Imbeaud; Hervé Delacroix; Lawrence P. Aggerbeck; Tal Pupko; P. Gorwood; Michel Simonneau; Jean-Marie Moalic

The SMARCA2 gene, which encodes BRM in the SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex, was recently identified as being associated with schizophrenia (SZ) in a genome-wide approach. Polymorphisms in SMARCA2, associated with the disease, produce changes in the expression of the gene and/or in the encoded amino acid sequence. We show here that an SWI/SNF-centered network including the Smarca2 gene is modified by the down-regulation of REST/NRSF in a mouse neuronal cell line. REST/NRSF down-regulation also modifies the levels of Smarce1, Smarcd3 and SWI/SNF interactors (Hdac1, RcoR1 and Mecp2). Smarca2 down-regulation generates an abnormal dendritic spine morphology that is an intermediate phenotype of SZ. We further found that 8 (CSF2RA, HIST1H2BJ, NOTCH4, NRGN, SHOX, SMARCA2, TCF4 and ZNF804A) out of 10 genome-wide supported SZ-associated genes are part of an interacting network (including SMARCA2), 5 members of which encode transcription regulators. The expression of 3 (TCF4, SMARCA2 and CSF2RA) of the 10 genome-wide supported SZ-associated genes is modified when the REST/NRSF-SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex is experimentally manipulated in mouse cell lines and in transgenic mouse models. The REST/NRSF-SWI/SNF deregulation also results in the differential expression of genes that are clustered in chromosomes suggesting the induction of genome-wide epigenetic changes. Finally, we found that SMARCA2 interactors and the genome-wide supported SZ-associated genes are considerably enriched in genes displaying positive selection in primates and in the human lineage which suggests the occurrence of novel protein interactions in primates. Altogether, these data identify the SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex as a key component of the genetic architecture of SZ.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2015

Monoamine oxidase A gene promoter methylation and transcriptional downregulation in an offender population with antisocial personality disorder

D. Checknita; Gilles Maussion; Benoit Labonté; Stefano Comai; Richard E. Tremblay; Frank Vitaro; N. Turecki; Antonella Bertazzo; Gabriella Gobbi; Gilles Côté; Gustavo Turecki

BACKGROUND Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) is characterised by elevated impulsive aggression and increased risk for criminal behaviour and incarceration. Deficient activity of the monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene is suggested to contribute to serotonergic system dysregulation strongly associated with impulsive aggression and antisocial criminality. AIMS To elucidate the role of epigenetic processes in altered MAOA expression and serotonin regulation in a population of incarcerated offenders with ASPD compared with a healthy non-incarcerated control population. METHOD Participants were 86 incarcerated participants with ASPD and 73 healthy controls. MAOA promoter methylation was compared between case and control groups. We explored the functional impact of MAOA promoter methylation on gene expression in vitro and blood 5-HT levels in a subset of the case group. RESULTS Results suggest that MAOA promoter hypermethylation is associated with ASPD and may contribute to downregulation of MAOA gene expression, as indicated by functional assays in vitro, and regression analysis with whole-blood serotonin levels in offenders with ASPD. CONCLUSIONS These results are consistent with prior literature suggesting MAOA and serotonergic dysregulation in antisocial populations. Our results offer the first evidence suggesting epigenetic mechanisms may contribute to MAOA dysregulation in antisocial offenders.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Disruption of a Large Intergenic Noncoding RNA in Subjects with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities

Michael E. Talkowski; Gilles Maussion; Liam Crapper; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Ian Blumenthal; Carrie Hanscom; Colby Chiang; Amelia M. Lindgren; Shahrin Pereira; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Alpha B. Diallo; Juan Pablo Lopez; Gustavo Turecki; Elizabeth Suchi Chen; Carolina Oliveira Gigek; David J. Harris; Va Lip; Yu An; Marta Biagioli; Marcy E. MacDonald; Mike Lin; Stephen J. Haggarty; Pamela Sklar; Shaun Purcell; Manolis Kellis; Stuart Schwartz; Lisa G. Shaffer; Marvin R. Natowicz; Yiping Shen; Cynthia C. Morton

Large intergenic noncoding (linc) RNAs represent a newly described class of ribonucleic acid whose importance in human disease remains undefined. We identified a severely developmentally delayed 16-year-old female with karyotype 46,XX,t(2;11)(p25.1;p15.1)dn in the absence of clinically significant copy number variants (CNVs). DNA capture followed by next-generation sequencing of the translocation breakpoints revealed disruption of a single noncoding gene on chromosome 2, LINC00299, whose RNA product is expressed in all tissues measured, but most abundantly in brain. Among a series of additional, unrelated subjects referred for clinical diagnostic testing who showed CNV affecting this locus, we identified four with exon-crossing deletions in association with neurodevelopmental abnormalities. No disruption of the LINC00299 coding sequence was seen in almost 14,000 control subjects. Together, these subjects with disruption of LINC00299 implicate this particular noncoding RNA in brain development and raise the possibility that, as a class, abnormalities of lincRNAs may play a significant role in human developmental disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Regulation of a truncated form of Tropomyosin-related kinase B (TrkB) by Hsa-miR-185* in frontal cortex of suicide completers

Gilles Maussion; Jennie Yang; Volodymyr Yerko; Philip A. Barker; Naguib Mechawar; Carl Ernst; Gustavo Turecki

Background TrkB-T1 is a BDNF receptor lacking a tyrosine kinase domain that is highly expressed in astrocytes and regulates BDNF-evoked calcium transients. Previous studies indicate that downregulation of TrkB-T1 in frontal cortex may be involved in neurobiological processes underlying suicide. Methods In a microarray screening study (N = 8), we interrogated all known microRNA in the frontal cortex of suicide completers with low expression of TrkB-T1 and normal controls. These findings were validated and followed up in a larger sample of cases and controls (N = 55). Functional analyses included microRNA silencing, microRNA overexpression and luciferase assays to investigate specificity and to validate interactions between differentially expressed microRNA and TrkB-T1. Results MicroRNAs Hsa-miR-185* and Hsa-miR-491-3p were upregulated in suicide completers with low expression of TrkB.T1 (Pnominal: 9.10−5 and 1.8.10−4 respectively; FDR-corrected p = 0.031). Bioinformatic analyses revealed five putative binding sites for the DiGeorge syndrome linked microRNA Hsa-miR-185*in the 3′UTR of TrkB-T1, but none for Hsa-miR-491-3P. The increase of Hsa-miR-185* in frontal cortex of suicide completers was validated then confirmed in a larger, randomly selected group of suicide completers, where an inverse correlation between Hsa-miR-185* and TrkB-T1 expression was observed (R = −0.439; p = 0.001). Silencing and overexpression studies performed in human cell lines confirmed the inverse relationship between hsa-mir-185* and trkB-T1 expression. Luciferase assays demonstrated that Hsa-miR-185* binds to sequences in the 3′UTR of TrkB-T1. Conclusion These results suggest that an increase of Hsa-miR-185* expression levels regulates, at least in part, the TrkB-T1 decrease observed in the frontal cortex of suicide completers and further implicate the 22q11 region in psychopathology.


Epigenetics | 2014

Functional DNA methylation in a transcript specific 3′UTR region of TrkB associates with suicide

Gilles Maussion; Jennie Yang; Matthew Suderman; Alpha B. Diallo; Corina Nagy; Mitchell Arnovitz; Naguib Mechawar; Gustavo Turecki

Previous studies indicate that a subgroup of suicide completers has low cortical brain expression levels of TrkB-T1, a TrkB gene transcript that is highly expressed in astrocytes. Epigenetic modifications, including methylation changes in the TrkB promoter, partially explain TrkB-T1 low expression levels in brain tissue from suicide completers. The aim of this study was to investigate whether methylation changes in other regions of the TrkB gene could also contribute to the significant downregulation of the TrkB-T1 transcript observed in the brain of suicide completers. Methylation levels were assessed on BA8/9 from suicide completers expressing low TrkB-T1 transcript levels and controls, using custom-made Agilent arrays tiling the whole TrkB gene. After statistical correction for multiple testing, five probes located in the TrkB-T1 3′UTR region were found hypermethylated in the frontal cortex of suicide completers. These results were validated for four CpGs spanning a 150 bp sequence by cloning and Sanger sequencing bisulfite treated DNA. We found a significant correlation between the methylation level at these four CpGs and TrkB-T1 expression in BA8/9. Site-specific hypermethylation on this 3′UTR sequence induced decreased luciferase activity in reporter gene cell assays. Site-specific differential methylation in the TrkB-T1 3′UTR region associates with functional changes in TrkB-T1 expression and may play a significant role in the important decrease of cortical TrkB-T1 expression observed among suicide completers.


Translational Psychiatry | 2015

A molecular model for neurodevelopmental disorders

Carolina Oliveira Gigek; Elizabeth Suchi Chen; Vanessa Ota; Gilles Maussion; Huashan Peng; Kathryn Vaillancourt; Alpha B. Diallo; Juan Pablo Lopez; Liam Crapper; Cristina Vasuta; Guangjie Chen; Carl Ernst

Genes implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) important in cognition and behavior may have convergent function and several cellular pathways have been implicated, including protein translational control, chromatin modification, and synapse assembly and maintenance. Here, we test the convergent effects of methyl-CpG binding domain 5 (MBD5) and special AT-rich binding protein 2 (SATB2) reduced dosage in human neural stem cells (NSCs), two genes implicated in 2q23.1 and 2q33.1 deletion syndromes, respectively, to develop a generalized model for NDDs. We used short hairpin RNA stably incorporated into healthy neural stem cells to supress MBD5 and SATB2 expression, and massively parallel RNA sequencing, DNA methylation sequencing and microRNA arrays to test the hypothesis that a primary etiology of NDDs is the disruption of the balance of NSC proliferation and differentiation. We show that reduced dosage of either gene leads to significant overlap of gene-expression patterns, microRNA patterns and DNA methylation states with control NSCs in a differentiating state, suggesting that a unifying feature of 2q23.1 and 2q33.1 deletion syndrome may be a lack of regulation between proliferation and differentiation in NSCs, as we observed previously for TCF4 and EHMT1 suppression following a similar experimental paradigm. We propose a model of NDDs whereby the balance of NSC proliferation and differentiation is affected, but where the molecules that drive this effect are largely specific to disease-causing genetic variation. NDDs are diverse, complex and unique, but the optimal balance of factors that determine when and where neural stem cells differentiate may be a major feature underlying the diverse phenotypic spectrum of NDDs.

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Gustavo Turecki

Douglas Mental Health University Institute

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Naguib Mechawar

Douglas Mental Health University Institute

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Huashan Peng

McGill University Health Centre

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Benoit Labonté

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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