Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders

Background: Psychiatric disorders are common mental disorders without a pathological biomarker. Classic genetic studies found that an extra X chromosome frequently causes psychiatric symptoms in patients with either Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) or Triple X syndrome (XXX). Over-dosage of some X-linked...

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Main Authors: Baohu Ji, Kerin K. Higa, John R. Kelsoe, Xianjin Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-08-01
Series:EBioMedicine
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352396415300426
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spelling doaj-0610770e644e42a080924c889dfba8ca2020-11-25T03:06:04ZengElsevierEBioMedicine2352-39642015-08-012890991810.1016/j.ebiom.2015.06.012Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective DisordersBaohu JiKerin K. HigaJohn R. KelsoeXianjin ZhouBackground: Psychiatric disorders are common mental disorders without a pathological biomarker. Classic genetic studies found that an extra X chromosome frequently causes psychiatric symptoms in patients with either Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) or Triple X syndrome (XXX). Over-dosage of some X-linked escapee genes was suggested to cause psychiatric disorders. However, relevance of these rare genetic diseases to the pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders in the general population of psychiatric patients is unknown. Methods: XIST and several X-linked genes were studied in 36 lymphoblastoid cell lines from healthy females and 60 lymphoblastoid cell lines from female patients with either bipolar disorder or recurrent major depression. XIST and KDM5C expression was also quantified in 48 RNA samples from postmortem human brains of healthy female controls and female psychiatric patients. Findings: We found that the XIST gene, a master in control of X chromosome inactivation (XCI), is significantly over-expressed (p = 1 × 10−7, corrected after multiple comparisons) in the lymphoblastoid cells of female patients with either bipolar disorder or major depression. The X-linked escapee gene KDM5C also displays significant up-regulation (p = 5.3 × 10−7, corrected after multiple comparisons) in the patients' cells. Expression of XIST and KDM5C is highly correlated (Pearson's coefficient, r = 0.78, p = 1.3 × 10−13). Studies on human postmortem brains supported over-expression of the XIST gene in female psychiatric patients. Interpretations: We propose that over-expression of XIST may cause or result from subtle alteration of XCI, which up-regulates the expression of some X-linked escapee genes including KDM5C. Over-expression of X-linked genes could be a common mechanism for the development of psychiatric disorders between patients with those rare genetic diseases and the general population of female psychiatric patients with XIST over-expression. Our studies suggest that XIST and KDM5C expression could be used as a biological marker for diagnosis of psychiatric disorders in a significantly large subset of female patients. Research in context: Due to lack of biological markers, diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric disorders are subjective. There is utmost urgency to identify biomarkers for clinics, research, and drug development. We found that XIST and KDM5C gene expression may be used as a biological marker for diagnosis of major affective disorders in a significantly large subset of female patients from the general population. Our studies show that over-expression of XIST and some X-linked escapee genes may be a common mechanism for development of psychiatric disorders between the patients with rare genetic diseases (XXY or XXX) and the general population of female psychiatric patients.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352396415300426XISTX chromosome inactivationX-linked escapee genesKDM5CMajor affective disorders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Baohu Ji
Kerin K. Higa
John R. Kelsoe
Xianjin Zhou
spellingShingle Baohu Ji
Kerin K. Higa
John R. Kelsoe
Xianjin Zhou
Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
EBioMedicine
XIST
X chromosome inactivation
X-linked escapee genes
KDM5C
Major affective disorders
author_facet Baohu Ji
Kerin K. Higa
John R. Kelsoe
Xianjin Zhou
author_sort Baohu Ji
title Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
title_short Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
title_full Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
title_fullStr Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
title_full_unstemmed Over-expression of XIST, the Master Gene for X Chromosome Inactivation, in Females With Major Affective Disorders
title_sort over-expression of xist, the master gene for x chromosome inactivation, in females with major affective disorders
publisher Elsevier
series EBioMedicine
issn 2352-3964
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Background: Psychiatric disorders are common mental disorders without a pathological biomarker. Classic genetic studies found that an extra X chromosome frequently causes psychiatric symptoms in patients with either Klinefelter syndrome (XXY) or Triple X syndrome (XXX). Over-dosage of some X-linked escapee genes was suggested to cause psychiatric disorders. However, relevance of these rare genetic diseases to the pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders in the general population of psychiatric patients is unknown. Methods: XIST and several X-linked genes were studied in 36 lymphoblastoid cell lines from healthy females and 60 lymphoblastoid cell lines from female patients with either bipolar disorder or recurrent major depression. XIST and KDM5C expression was also quantified in 48 RNA samples from postmortem human brains of healthy female controls and female psychiatric patients. Findings: We found that the XIST gene, a master in control of X chromosome inactivation (XCI), is significantly over-expressed (p = 1 × 10−7, corrected after multiple comparisons) in the lymphoblastoid cells of female patients with either bipolar disorder or major depression. The X-linked escapee gene KDM5C also displays significant up-regulation (p = 5.3 × 10−7, corrected after multiple comparisons) in the patients' cells. Expression of XIST and KDM5C is highly correlated (Pearson's coefficient, r = 0.78, p = 1.3 × 10−13). Studies on human postmortem brains supported over-expression of the XIST gene in female psychiatric patients. Interpretations: We propose that over-expression of XIST may cause or result from subtle alteration of XCI, which up-regulates the expression of some X-linked escapee genes including KDM5C. Over-expression of X-linked genes could be a common mechanism for the development of psychiatric disorders between patients with those rare genetic diseases and the general population of female psychiatric patients with XIST over-expression. Our studies suggest that XIST and KDM5C expression could be used as a biological marker for diagnosis of psychiatric disorders in a significantly large subset of female patients. Research in context: Due to lack of biological markers, diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric disorders are subjective. There is utmost urgency to identify biomarkers for clinics, research, and drug development. We found that XIST and KDM5C gene expression may be used as a biological marker for diagnosis of major affective disorders in a significantly large subset of female patients from the general population. Our studies show that over-expression of XIST and some X-linked escapee genes may be a common mechanism for development of psychiatric disorders between the patients with rare genetic diseases (XXY or XXX) and the general population of female psychiatric patients.
topic XIST
X chromosome inactivation
X-linked escapee genes
KDM5C
Major affective disorders
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352396415300426
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