Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements

Transposable elements make up a much larger portion of the genome than protein-coding genes, yet we know relatively little about their function in the human genome. However, we are beginning to more fully understand their role in brain development, neuroinflammation, and adaptation to environmental...

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Main Authors: Hannah E. Lapp, Richard G. Hunter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-11-01
Series:Neurobiology of Stress
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289518301024
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spelling doaj-ecdaef5a88e5484d9b5851b5c12b91d22020-11-25T02:07:52ZengElsevierNeurobiology of Stress2352-28952019-11-0111Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elementsHannah E. Lapp0Richard G. Hunter1Corresponding author.; University of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Blvd Boston, MA, 02125, USAUniversity of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Blvd Boston, MA, 02125, USATransposable elements make up a much larger portion of the genome than protein-coding genes, yet we know relatively little about their function in the human genome. However, we are beginning to more fully understand their role in brain development, neuroinflammation, and adaptation to environmental insults such as stress. For instance, glucocorticoid receptor activation regulates transposable elements in the brain following acute stress. Early life is a period of substantial brain development during which transposable elements play a role. Environmental exposures and experiences during early life that promote abnormal regulation of transposable elements may lead to a cascade of events that ultimately increase susceptibility to disorders later in life. Recent attention to transposable elements in psychiatric illness has begun to clarify associations indicative of dysregulation of different classes of transposable elements in stress-related and neurodevelopmental illness. Though individual susceptibility or resiliency to psychiatric illness has not been explained by traditional genetic studies, the wide inter-individual variability in transposable element composition in the human genome make TEs attractive candidates to elucidate this differential susceptibility. In this review, we discuss evidence that regulation of transposable elements in the brain are stage-specific, sensitive to environmental factors, and may be impacted by early life perturbations. We further present evidence of associations with stress-related and neurodevelopmental psychiatric illness from a developmental perspective. Keywords: Retrotransposons, Development, Neurodevelopmental disorders, Stress, LINE1, Aluhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289518301024
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannah E. Lapp
Richard G. Hunter
spellingShingle Hannah E. Lapp
Richard G. Hunter
Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
Neurobiology of Stress
author_facet Hannah E. Lapp
Richard G. Hunter
author_sort Hannah E. Lapp
title Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
title_short Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
title_full Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
title_fullStr Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
title_full_unstemmed Early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
title_sort early life exposures, neurodevelopmental disorders, and transposable elements
publisher Elsevier
series Neurobiology of Stress
issn 2352-2895
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Transposable elements make up a much larger portion of the genome than protein-coding genes, yet we know relatively little about their function in the human genome. However, we are beginning to more fully understand their role in brain development, neuroinflammation, and adaptation to environmental insults such as stress. For instance, glucocorticoid receptor activation regulates transposable elements in the brain following acute stress. Early life is a period of substantial brain development during which transposable elements play a role. Environmental exposures and experiences during early life that promote abnormal regulation of transposable elements may lead to a cascade of events that ultimately increase susceptibility to disorders later in life. Recent attention to transposable elements in psychiatric illness has begun to clarify associations indicative of dysregulation of different classes of transposable elements in stress-related and neurodevelopmental illness. Though individual susceptibility or resiliency to psychiatric illness has not been explained by traditional genetic studies, the wide inter-individual variability in transposable element composition in the human genome make TEs attractive candidates to elucidate this differential susceptibility. In this review, we discuss evidence that regulation of transposable elements in the brain are stage-specific, sensitive to environmental factors, and may be impacted by early life perturbations. We further present evidence of associations with stress-related and neurodevelopmental psychiatric illness from a developmental perspective. Keywords: Retrotransposons, Development, Neurodevelopmental disorders, Stress, LINE1, Alu
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289518301024
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