Chromatin profiling in human neurons reveals aberrant roles for histone acetylation and BET family proteins in schizophrenia
Farrelly L, Zheng S, Schrode N, Topol A, Bhanu N, Bastle R, Ramakrishnan A, Chan J, Cetin B, Flaherty E, Shen L, Gleason K, Tamminga C, Garcia B, Li H, Brennand K, Maze I. Chromatin profiling in human neurons reveals aberrant roles for histone acetylation and BET family proteins in schizophrenia. Nature Communications 2022, 13: 2195. PMID: 35459277, PMCID: PMC9033776, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-29922-0.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAcetylationCell Cycle ProteinsChromatinHistonesHumansInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsNerve Tissue ProteinsNeuronsNuclear ProteinsProtein Processing, Post-TranslationalReceptors, Cell SurfaceSchizophreniaTranscription FactorsConceptsHistone posttranslational modificationsPosttranslational modificationsUnbiased proteomic approachPluripotent stem cellsPatient-derived neuronsH2A.Z acetylationChromatin profilingHyperacetylated histonesFamily proteinsProteomic approachProtein interactionsHistone acetylationTranscriptional abnormalitiesEpigenetic factorsExtraterminal (BET) proteinsSZ casesRisk variantsHuman neuronsStem cellsAberrant roleProtein inhibitionBona fideTreatment of schizophreniaPostmortem human brainCritical role