Abstract

Ubiquitin E3 ligase 3A (UBE3A) encodes an E3 ubiquitin ligase whose loss from the maternal allele causes the neurodevelopmental disorder Angelman syndrome (AS). Previous studies of UBE3A function have not examined full Ube3a deletion in mouse, the complexity of imprinted gene networks in brain nor the molecular basis of systems-level cognitive dysfunctions in AS. We therefore utilized a systems biology approach to elucidate how UBE3A loss impacts the early postnatal brain in a novel CRISPR/Cas9-engineered rat Angelman model of a complete Ube3a deletion. Strand-specific transcriptome analysis of offspring from maternally or paternally inherited Ube3a deletions revealed the expected parental expression patterns of Ube3a sense and antisense transcripts by postnatal day 2 (P2) in hypothalamus and day 9 (P9) in cortex, compared to wild-type littermates. The dependency of genome-wide effects on parent-of-origin, Ube3a genotype and time (P2 and P9) was investigated through transcriptome (RNA sequencing of cortex and hypothalamus) and methylome (whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of hypothalamus). Weighted gene co-expression and co-methylation network analyses identified co-regulated networks in maternally inherited Ube3a deletion offspring enriched in postnatal developmental processes including Wnt signaling, synaptic regulation, neuronal and glial functions, epigenetic regulation, ubiquitin, circadian entrainment and splicing. Furthermore, we showed that loss of the paternal Ube3a antisense transcript resulted in both unique and overlapping dysregulated gene pathways with maternal loss, predominantly at the level of differential methylation. Together, these results provide a holistic examination of the molecular impacts of UBE3A loss in brain, supporting the existence of interactive epigenetic networks between maternal and paternal transcripts at the Ube3a locus.

Highlights

  • UBE3A encodes an E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets multiple proteins for proteasomal degradation [1,2]

  • The neurodevelopmental disorder Angelman syndrome is caused by loss of UBE3A

  • While mouse models have been useful in investigating diverse roles for UBE3A, their partial mutations are of limited utility for investigating parental imprinting effects or identifying a complete list of downstream differences in gene pathways relevant to developing therapies for Angelman syndrome

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Summary

Introduction

UBE3A encodes an E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets multiple proteins for proteasomal degradation [1,2]. Angelman syndrome (AS) is a neurogenetic disorder caused by deletion of the maternal 15q11.2-q13.3 locus or maternal-specific UBE3A mutation [3]. Paternal transcripts expressed within human 15q11.2-q13.3 include a long polycistronic transcript encoding the splicing protein SNRPN, snoRNA host genes with independent functions that produce multiple non-coding snoRNA subunits, as well as UBE3A-ATS. Loss of the paternally expressed SNORD116 locus causes Prader-Willi syndrome and results in circadian dependent changes in gene expression and DNA methylation genome-wide in cortex [5,6], as well as cognitive impairments [7]. The mechanisms behind how the regulated paternal UBE3A-ATS transcript may contribute to endophenotypes is currently unknown

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