Epigenomic dissection of Alzheimer’s disease pinpoints causal variants and reveals epigenome erosion

Xushen Xiong(Vassar College), Benjamin T. James(Broad Institute), Carles A. Boix(Broad Institute), Yongjin Park(Broad Institute), Kyriaki Galani(Broad Institute), Matheus B. Victor(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Na Sun(Broad Institute), Lei Hou(Broad Institute), Li‐Lun Ho(Broad Institute), Julio Mantero(Broad Institute), Aine Ni Scannail(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Vishnu Dileep(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Weixiu Dong(University of California San Diego), Hansruedi Mathys(University of Pittsburgh), David A. Bennett(Rush University Medical Center), Li‐Huei Tsai(Broad Institute), Manolis Kellis(Broad Institute)
Cell
September 1, 2023
Cited by 188Open Access
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Abstract

Recent work has identified dozens of non-coding loci for Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk, but their mechanisms and AD transcriptional regulatory circuitry are poorly understood. Here, we profile epigenomic and transcriptomic landscapes of 850,000 nuclei from prefrontal cortexes of 92 individuals with and without AD to build a map of the brain regulome, including epigenomic profiles, transcriptional regulators, co-accessibility modules, and peak-to-gene links in a cell-type-specific manner. We develop methods for multimodal integration and detecting regulatory modules using peak-to-gene linking. We show AD risk loci are enriched in microglial enhancers and for specific TFs including SPI1, ELF2, and RUNX1. We detect 9,628 cell-type-specific ATAC-QTL loci, which we integrate alongside peak-to-gene links to prioritize AD variant regulatory circuits. We report differential accessibility of regulatory modules in late AD in glia and in early AD in neurons. Strikingly, late-stage AD brains show global epigenome dysregulation indicative of epigenome erosion and cell identity loss.


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