For several years the characterization of CNVs in autism patients has identified genes that potentially contribute to the etiology of the disorder [
9,
58-
60]. In this study we used high-resolution genomic tilepath arrays with comparative genomic hybridization to identify 113 CNVs within 119 unrelated autistic individuals. Of note were five novel CNVs that do not map to prior regions of linkage and which, according to Fable
http://fable.chop.edu/, contain only one gene in 8q22.2 (RNF19A) that has previously been implicated in autism spectrum disorders [
44]. CNVs observed in known autism regions included a 12.5 Mb deletion within 2q24.1-2q24.3 [
45,
46], two rearrangements in 15q11-13 [
12-
23,
47-
49], and a 0.7 Mb deletion in 3p25.3. We chose to focus on the deletion in chromosome 3p25.3 because of previous reported linkage to the region [
61,
62], association data implicating the oxytocin receptor (
OXTR) that is contained within the deletion to the etiology of autism [
51-
53]. More recently, the DECIPHER database
https://decipher.sanger.ac.uk/ has had copy number data deposited from a syndromic patient who has developmental delay and cognitive impairment presumably emanating from a novel 1.1 Mb deletion that contains
OXTR, amongst other genes. Detailed DNA methylation analysis of the promoter region of
OXTR, prompted by the observation that the proband's autistic brother did not carry the novel deletion, identified a single CpG dinucleotide within a known OXTR control region [
56] that, independently, showed a statistically significant increase in methylation in PBMCs and the temporal cortex tissue of autism cases compared to controls. The identification of similar methylation profiles in the temporal cortex and peripheral blood may be indicative of an early developmental event during which these profiles are differentially established, prior to germ layer specification. If this locus is epigenetically labile, then it might be vulnerable to (unknown) exposures
in utero during the first few weeks of pregnancy that lead to shifts in methylation status of OXTR. Similar influences have been seen in IGF2 methylation based on
in utero exposures such as smoking and folic acid intake in humans [
63]. Since epigenetic profiles undergo reprogramming during very early gestation (fertilization to implantation), it is not surprising that the profiles in these two disparate tissue types of ectodermal and mesodermal origin are similar and furthermore provides a potential means for detection in multiple, more accessible tissues.
The impact of this epigenetic mark on
OXTR expression was supported by analysis of the corresponding mRNA from the temporal cortex of autism cases matched for age and sex and controls. As one would hypothesize given their increased methylation of
OXTR, the autism cases also showed statistically lower transcript levels of
OXTR expression compared to the normal controls. Because deletions encompassing
OXTR have not been observed in other studies characterizing structural variation in autism [
58,
64,
65] such events appear to be rare. At the same time our findings suggest that the hypermethylated status of
OXTR in autism, resulting in a decrease in
OXTR expression, may more commonly contribute to the disorder. While the mechanism for the development of autism from a germ line deletion of
OXTR versus epigenetic silencing of the gene in the temporal cortex may clearly be different, the effect on oxytocin signaling could be the same. Together, these data provide strong evidence for the role of
OXTR and oxytocin signaling pathway in the etiology of autism and, for the first time, show that the epigenetic regulation of
OXTR may be an important factor in the development of the disorder.
Epigenetic control of autism susceptibility is a recent concept and most certainly a topic of great interest in the field. Over the past decade, researchers have uncovered suggestive links between epigenetics and autism, for example, autism is associated with duplications of 15q11-13 (especially maternally inherited), an imprinted region in the genome where DNA methylation status has been linked to Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS) [
66]; mutation within a gene that encodes a methyl-DNA-binding protein (
MECP2, (MIM accession no.: 300005)) is the causative agent of Rett syndrome [
67]; and mutation of this same gene has been associated with both autism and AS populations [
55]. Nagarajan
et al have shown that 79% of autism cases have a decrease in
MECP2 expression in the frontal cortex and that an increase in aberrant DNA methylation correlates with this decrease in
MECP2 expression [
68]. These data implicate epigenetic dysregulation as a mechanism for the development of autism and justify the examination of DNA methylation of autism candidate genes, such as
OXTR identified in this study.
The oxytocin receptor,
OXTR, is spatially and temporally regulated by a complex combination of sex hormones, inflammatory cytokines, oxytocin (OXT) feedback and epigenetic mechanisms [
56,
57]. It is a high affinity G-protein coupled receptor for OXT, a nine amino acid hormone that has important and complex roles in animal physiology and behavior [
69], including parturition and neurotransmission. A putative role for OXT in the development of ASDs was first highlighted by Insel and colleagues [
70] who showed that signaling of oxytocin and the closely related molecule vasopressin play important 'prosocial' roles influencing social behavior and cognitive function in a species-specific manner [
71-
73]. Subsequent studies in mice revealed that
Oxt [
74] and
Oxtr [
75] knockouts largely resulted in normal parturition, however, social memory was impaired. Recently, Lee and colleagues [
76] showed that only male mice with a targeted forebrain knock out of
Oxtr exhibited social impairment by failure to recognize individuals of their own species. It has been suggested that the normal social behavior of the female knockout mice may be attributed to the compensatory function of vasopressin or developmental compensation [
69,
77]. In an excellent review by Carter [
50] that describes the complex sexually dimorphic roles of vasopressin and oxytocin in brain function and behavior, it is apparent that aberrant oxytocin and/or vasopressin signaling is likely to elicit sex-specific outcomes, which is of particular relevance to autism because of disproportionate number of affected males. Our family analysis identified an
OXTR deletion in the mother who does not present with autism. Sex-specific effects of OXTR function from animal models, together with statistical data that suggest dominantly acting
de novo mutations may have reduced penetrance in females [
78], may explain why the heterozygous deletion of
OXTR in the mother from our study does not result in autism while the male proband displays the disorder.
We identified a single CpG dinucleotide within a predicted CpG island that showed statistically significant hypermethylation in PBMCs and the temporal cortex of individuals with autism compared to controls. Although the dominant paradigm for regulation of transcription by DNA methylation suggests that clusters of CpGs are necessary for silencing, recent evidence has indicated that methylation of single CpG dinucleotides may also lead to transcriptional changes via interference of transcription factor binding or recruitment of silencing factors [
79]. This is the most likely explanation for the findings presented here as CpG site -934 falls within a predicted c-Rel, ZHX2, and LGALS4 binding domains (T. Wang, personal communication). However, further molecular work is required to dissect the likely complex transcriptional regulation of
OXTR.
In this study, we focused on the temporal cortex (Brodmann areas 41/42 and 22) because studies have shown that localized temporal dysfunction is linked with clinical symptoms in autism, such as perceptive, emotional and cognitive deficits [
32-
35]. Although we were not able to determine the methylation status of cortex tissue from the family in which we observed the
OXTR deletion, the data we collected from the affected sibling shows hypermethylation of the CpG dinucleotide (-934) in the predicted CpG island upstream of
OXTR. Given our results suggesting that DNA methylation of
OXTR in PBMCs may be a marker of methylation status in the temporal cortex, it follows that the affected sibling may also exhibit a decrease in
OXTR expression due to methylation instead of deletion; thus implicating two separate mechanisms of transcriptional regulation with the same outcome. These results suggest that because the methylation status of site -934 is significantly different in the temporal cortex and PBMCs between autism cases and controls, measuring the methylation status of
OXTR from the blood for autism cases could act as a surrogate for methylation status in the temporal cortex and be diagnostic of affection status, together with traditional diagnostic criteria.