Jishu Xu
Broad Institute
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Featured researches published by Jishu Xu.
JAMA Neurology | 2015
Lei Yu; Lori B. Chibnik; Gyan Srivastava; Nathalie Pochet; Jingyun Yang; Jishu Xu; James Kozubek; Nikolaus Obholzer; Sue Leurgans; Julie A. Schneider; Alexander Meissner; Philip L. De Jager; David A. Bennett
IMPORTANCE Recent large-scale genome-wide association studies have discovered several genetic variants associated with Alzheimer disease (AD); however, the extent to which DNA methylation in these AD loci contributes to the disease susceptibility remains unknown. OBJECTIVE To examine the association of brain DNA methylation in 28 reported AD loci with AD pathologies. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Ongoing community-based clinical pathological cohort studies of aging and dementia (the Religious Orders Study and the Rush Memory and Aging Project) among 740 autopsied participants 66.0 to 108.3 years old. EXPOSURES DNA methylation levels at individual CpG sites generated from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex tissue using a bead assay. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Pathological diagnosis of AD by National Institute on Aging-Reagan criteria following a standard postmortem examination. RESULTS Overall, 447 participants (60.4%) met the criteria for pathological diagnosis of AD. Brain DNA methylation in SORL1, ABCA7, HLA-DRB5, SLC24A4, and BIN1 was associated with pathological AD. The association was robustly retained after replacing the binary trait of pathological AD with 2 quantitative and molecular specific hallmarks of AD, namely, Aβ load and paired helical filament tau tangle density. Furthermore, RNA expression of transcripts of SORL1 and ABCA7 was associated with paired helical filament tau tangle density, and the expression of BIN1 was associated with Aβ load. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Brain DNA methylation in multiple AD loci is associated with AD pathologies. The results provide further evidence that disruption of DNA methylation is involved in the pathological process of AD.
PLOS Genetics | 2014
Andrew S. Lim; Gyan Srivastava; Lei Yu; Lori B. Chibnik; Jishu Xu; Aron S. Buchman; Julie A. Schneider; Amanda J. Myers; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager
Circadian rhythms modulate the biology of many human tissues, including brain tissues, and are driven by a near 24-hour transcriptional feedback loop. These rhythms are paralleled by 24-hour rhythms of large portions of the transcriptome. The role of dynamic DNA methylation in influencing these rhythms is uncertain. While recent work in Neurospora suggests that dynamic site-specific circadian rhythms of DNA methylation may play a role in modulating the fungal molecular clock, such rhythms and their relationship to RNA expression have not, to our knowledge, been elucidated in mammalian tissues, including human brain tissues. We hypothesized that 24-hour rhythms of DNA methylation exist in the human brain, and play a role in driving 24-hour rhythms of RNA expression. We analyzed DNA methylation levels in post-mortem human dorsolateral prefrontal cortex samples from 738 subjects. We assessed for 24-hour rhythmicity of 420,132 DNA methylation sites throughout the genome by considering methylation levels as a function of clock time of death and parameterizing these data using cosine functions. We determined global statistical significance by permutation. We then related rhythms of DNA methylation with rhythms of RNA expression determined by RNA sequencing. We found evidence of significant 24-hour rhythmicity of DNA methylation. Regions near transcription start sites were enriched for high-amplitude rhythmic DNA methylation sites, which were in turn time locked to 24-hour rhythms of RNA expression of nearby genes, with the nadir of methylation preceding peak transcript expression by 1–3 hours. Weak ante-mortem rest-activity rhythms were associated with lower amplitude DNA methylation rhythms as were older age and the presence of Alzheimers disease. These findings support the hypothesis that 24-hour rhythms of DNA methylation, particularly near transcription start sites, may play a role in driving 24-hour rhythms of gene expression in the human dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and may be affected by age and Alzheimers disease.
PLOS Biology | 2016
Yousuf O. Ali; Hunter M. Allen; Lei Yu; David Li-Kroeger; Dena Bakhshizadehmahmoudi; Asante Hatcher; Cristin McCabe; Jishu Xu; Nicole L. Bjorklund; Giulio Taglialatela; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager; Joshua M. Shulman; Hugo J. Bellen; Hui-Chen Lu
Nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyl transferase 2 (NMNAT2) is neuroprotective in numerous preclinical models of neurodegeneration. Here, we show that brain nmnat2 mRNA levels correlate positively with global cognitive function and negatively with AD pathology. In AD brains, NMNAT2 mRNA and protein levels are reduced. NMNAT2 shifts its solubility and colocalizes with aggregated Tau in AD brains, similar to chaperones, which aid in the clearance or refolding of misfolded proteins. Investigating the mechanism of this observation, we discover a novel chaperone function of NMNAT2, independent from its enzymatic activity. NMNAT2 complexes with heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) to refold aggregated protein substrates. NMNAT2’s refoldase activity requires a unique C-terminal ATP site, activated in the presence of HSP90. Furthermore, deleting NMNAT2 function increases the vulnerability of cortical neurons to proteotoxic stress and excitotoxicity. Interestingly, NMNAT2 acts as a chaperone to reduce proteotoxic stress, while its enzymatic activity protects neurons from excitotoxicity. Taken together, our data indicate that NMNAT2 exerts its chaperone or enzymatic function in a context-dependent manner to maintain neuronal health.
Nature Neuroscience | 2017
Bernard Ng; Charles C. White; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Solveig K. Sieberts; Cristin McCabe; Ellis Patrick; Jishu Xu; Lei Yu; Chris Gaiteri; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager
We report a multi-omic resource generated by applying quantitative trait locus (xQTL) analyses to RNA sequence, DNA methylation and histone acetylation data from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of 411 older adults who have all three data types. We identify SNPs significantly associated with gene expression, DNA methylation and histone modification levels. Many of these SNPs influence multiple molecular features, and we demonstrate that SNP effects on RNA expression are fully mediated by epigenetic features in 9% of these loci. Further, we illustrate the utility of our new resource, xQTL Serve, by using it to prioritize the cell type(s) most affected by an xQTL. We also reanalyze published genome wide association studies using an xQTL-weighted analysis approach and identify 18 new schizophrenia and 2 new bipolar susceptibility variants, which is more than double the number of loci that can be discovered with a larger blood-based expression eQTL resource.
Alzheimers & Dementia | 2016
Lei Yu; Lori B. Chibnik; Jingyun Yang; Cristin McCabe; Jishu Xu; Julie A. Schneider; Philip L. De Jager; David A. Bennett
We investigated the change in DNA methylation in peripheral blood CD4+ lymphocytes over time, examined the relation between CD4+ lymphocytes and brain methylation, and compared their associations with AD pathology.
Nature Neuroscience | 2018
Chris Gaiteri; Sarah E. Sullivan; Charles C. White; Shinya Tasaki; Jishu Xu; Mariko Taga; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Ellis Patrick; Vitalina Komashko; Cristin McCabe; Robert J. Smith; Elizabeth M. Bradshaw; David E. Root; Aviv Regev; Lei Yu; Lori B. Chibnik; Julie A. Schneider; Tracy L. Young-Pearse; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager
There is a need for new therapeutic targets with which to prevent Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a major contributor to aging-related cognitive decline. Here we report the construction and validation of a molecular network of the aging human frontal cortex. Using RNA sequence data from 478 individuals, we first build a molecular network using modules of coexpressed genes and then relate these modules to AD and its neuropathologic and cognitive endophenotypes. We confirm these associations in two independent AD datasets. We also illustrate the use of the network in prioritizing amyloid- and cognition-associated genes for in vitro validation in human neurons and astrocytes. These analyses based on unique cohorts enable us to resolve the role of distinct cortical modules that have a direct effect on the accumulation of AD pathology from those that have a direct effect on cognitive decline, exemplifying a network approach to complex diseases.The authors constructed and validated a molecular network of the aging human cortex from RNA sequencing data from 478 individuals and identified genes that affect cognitive decline or neuropathology in Alzheimer’s disease.
Nature Communications | 2017
Andrew S. Lim; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Lei Yu; Lori B. Chibnik; Sanam Ali; Jishu Xu; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager
Circadian and seasonal rhythms are seen in many species, modulate several aspects of human physiology, including brain functions such as mood and cognition, and influence many neurological and psychiatric illnesses. However, there are few data regarding the genome-scale molecular correlates underlying these rhythms, especially in the human brain. Here, we report widespread, site-specific and interrelated diurnal and seasonal rhythms of gene expression in the human brain, and show their relationship with parallel rhythms of epigenetic modification including histone acetylation, and DNA methylation. We also identify transcription factor-binding sites that may drive these effects. Further, we demonstrate that Alzheimers disease pathology disrupts these rhythms. These data suggest that interrelated diurnal and seasonal epigenetic and transcriptional rhythms may be an important feature of human brain biology, and perhaps human biology more broadly, and that changes in such rhythms may be consequences of, or contributors to, diseases such as Alzheimers disease.
Science Translational Medicine | 2017
Katie J. Ryan; Charles C. White; Kruti R. Patel; Jishu Xu; Marta Olah; Joseph M. Replogle; Michael Frangieh; Maria Cimpean; Phoebe Winn; Allison McHenry; Belinda J. Kaskow; Gail Chan; Nicole Cuerdon; David A. Bennett; Justin D. Boyd; Jaime Imitola; Wassim Elyaman; Philip L. De Jager; Elizabeth M. Bradshaw
A microglial-like cellular model can be used to identify functional consequences of genetic variants associated with neurodegenerative disease. The secret life of microglia In a new study, Ryan et al. characterized a cellular model of monocytes differentiated into a microglial-like state. They then demonstrated the effectiveness of this human in vitro cell model system for identifying functional consequences of genetic variation associated with neurodegenerative disease risk by performing a cis-expression quantitative trait locus (cis-eQTL) study. The authors identified six neurodegenerative disease–associated loci with genotype-driven gene expression differences in their cell model system. Two of these cis-eQTLs were not seen in ex vivo human monocytes, emphasizing the importance of examining the cell type of interest when investigating functional consequences of genetic variants. Microglia are emerging as a key cell type in neurodegenerative diseases, yet human microglia are challenging to study in vitro. We developed an in vitro cell model system composed of human monocyte-derived microglia-like (MDMi) cells that recapitulated key aspects of microglia phenotype and function. We then used this model system to perform an expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) study examining 94 genes from loci associated with Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and multiple sclerosis. We found six loci (CD33, PILRB, NUP160, LRRK2, RGS1, and METTL21B) in which the risk haplotype drives the association with both disease susceptibility and altered expression of a nearby gene (cis-eQTL). In the PILRB and LRRK2 loci, the cis-eQTL was found in the MDMi cells but not in human peripheral blood monocytes, suggesting that differentiation of monocytes into microglia-like cells led to the acquisition of a cellular state that could reveal the functional consequences of certain genetic variants. We further validated the effect of risk haplotypes at the protein level for PILRB and CD33, and we confirmed that the CD33 risk haplotype altered phagocytosis by the MDMi cells. We propose that increased LRRK2 gene expression by MDMi cells could be a functional outcome of rs76904798, a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the LRKK2 locus that is associated with Parkinson’s disease.
bioRxiv | 2018
Hans-Ulrich Klein; Cristin McCabe; Elizabeta Gjoneska; Sarah E. Sullivan; Belinda J. Kaskow; Anna Tang; Robert V Smith; Jishu Xu; Andreas R. Pfenning; Bradley E. Bernstein; Alexander Meissner; Julie A. Schneider; Li-Huei Tsai; Tracy L. Young-Pearse; David A. Bennett; Philip L. De Jager
Accumulation of tau and amyloid-β are two pathologic hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Here, we conducted an epigenome-wide association study using the H3K9 acetylation (H3K9Ac) mark in 669 aged human prefrontal cortices: in contrast to amyloid-β, tau protein burden had a broad effect on the epigenome, affecting 5,590 out of 26,384 H3K9Ac domains. Tau-related alterations aggregated in large genomic segments reflecting spatial chromatin organization, and the magnitude of these effects correlated with the segment’s nuclear lamina association. We confirmed the functional relevance of these chromatin changes by demonstrating (1) consistent transcriptional changes in three independent datasets and (2) similar findings in two AD mouse models. Finally, we found that tau overexpression in iPSC-derived neurons disrupted chromatin organization and that these effects could be blocked by a small molecule predicted to reverse the tau effect. Thus, we report large-scale tau-driven chromatin rearrangements in the aging human brain that may be reversible with HSP90 inhibitors.
bioRxiv | 2017
Ellis Patrick; Marta Olah; Mariko Taga; Hans-Ulrich Klein; Jishu Xu; Charles C. White; Daniel Felsky; Chris Gaiteri; Lori B. Chibnik; Julie A. Schneider; David A. Bennett; Elizabeth M Bradshaw; Philip L. De Jager
Microglial dysfunction has been proposed as one of the many cellular mechanisms that can contribute to the development of Alzheimers disease (AD). Here, using a transcriptional network map of the human frontal cortex, we identify five gene modules of co-expressed genes related to microglia and assess their role in the neuropathologic features of AD in 541 subjects from two cohort studies of brain aging. Two of these transcriptional programs – modules 113 and 114 – relate to the accumulation of β-amyloid, while module 5 relates to tau pathology. These modules are also detectable in the human brains epigenome, where we replicate these associations. In terms of tau, we propose that module 5, a marker of activated microglia, may lead to tau accumulation and subsequent cognitive decline. We validate our model further by showing that VASP, a representative module 5 gene, encodes a protein that is upregulated in activated microglia in AD.