Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Single-cell genomics identifies cell type–specific molecular changes in autism

Dmitry Velmeshev, Lucas Schirmer, Diane Jung, Maximilian Haeussler, Yonatan Perez, Simone Mayer, Aparna Bhaduri, Nitasha Goyal, David H. Rowitch, Arnold R. Kriegstein

Science · 2019

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Summary

Despite the clinical and genetic heterogeneity of autism, bulk gene expression studies show that changes in the neocortex of autism patients converge on common genes and pathways. However, direct assessment of specific cell types in the brain affected by autism has not been feasible until recently. We used single-nucleus RNA sequencing of cortical tissue from patients with autism to identify autism-associated transcriptomic changes in specific cell types. We found that synaptic signaling of upper-layer excitatory neurons and the molecular state of microglia are preferentially affected in autism. Moreover, our results show that dysregulation of specific groups of genes in cortico-cortical projection neurons correlates with clinical severity of autism. These findings suggest that molecular c

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1126/science.aav8130
Catalogue ID
SNmoj7nvsf-jwl9fe
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