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Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, First, Middle): BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH Provide the following information for the key personnel and other significant contributors in the order listed on Form Page 2. Follow this format for each person. DO NOT EXCEED FOUR PAGES. NAME POSITION TITLE Janine M. LaSalle, Ph. D. Professor eRA COMMONS USER NAME jmlasalle EDUCATION/TRAINING (Begin with baccalaureate or other initial professional education, such as nursing, and include postdoctoral training.) INSTITUTION AND LOCATION Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, VA Harvard University, Boston, MA HHMI, Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA A. Personal Statement DEGREE (if applicable) B.S. Ph.D. Postdoctoral YEAR(s) 1988 1993 1993-96 FIELD OF STUDY Biology Immunology Human Genetics The goal of the proposed research is to investigate epigenetic etiologies of human autism spectrum disorders, particularly associated with human chromosome 15q11-13. I have been involved since my postdoctoral training at Harvard in innovative research understanding chromatin dynamics of the 15q11-13 region and its relevance to parental imprinting and human neurodevelopmental disorders. Over the past 13 years, my laboratory has performed pioneering research in the emerging field of “Autism Epigenetics” by demonstrating overlapping pathways of gene dysregulation between Rett syndrome, 15q11-13 deletion/duplication disorders, and idiopathic autism. We have pioneered the use of human postmortem brain samples for epigenetic studies through a variety of novel methodologies including laser scanning cytometry, tissue microarrays, fluorescence in situ hybridization, and DNA methylation analyses to demonstrate overlapping epigenetic defects in multiple disorders. We were the first to perform combined epigenomic analyses of MeCP2 and DNA methylation of promoters genome-wide in a human neuronal cell line. The proposed studies expand upon the epigenomic analyses of cell lines and autism post-mortem brain samples. In summary, I have demonstrated a productive track record in the challenging but emerging field of autism epigenetics and my expertise and experience make me uniquely qualified for the proposed project. B. Positions and Honors Professional Background 1996-1997 Instructor of Pediatrics, Genetics Division Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School 1997-2003 Assistant Professor, Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Rowe Program in Human Genetics, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis 2003-2007 Associate Professor, Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Rowe Program in Human Genetics, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis 2007-present Professor, Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Rowe Program in Human Genetics, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis Honors, Awards, Professional Memberships, and Scientific Committees 1988 Magna Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa 1988 National Science Foundation graduate fellowship 1993 Clinical Immunology Society, Science Recognition Award for New Investigators 1993 Howard Hughes Medical Institute postdoctoral fellowship 1994 American Society of Human Genetics, Award Recipient for Postdoctoral Basic Research 1999 March of Dimes, Basil O’Connor Award 1999-present American Society of Human Genetics PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 09/04) Page Biographical Sketch Format Page Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, First, Middle): 2003-present 2005-2010 2006-present 2007-present 2008-present 2009-present 2009-present 2009-present 2009-present 2009-present 2010 International Society for Autism Research Member, Developmental Brain Disorders Study Section, NIH Editorial Board, Human Molecular Genetics Society for Neuroscience IDEAS Professional Advisory Board (Isodicentric 15 Exchange, Advocacy & Support) Editorial Board, Molecular Autism Scientific Advisory Board, International Rett Syndrome Foundation European Science Foundation Pool of Reviewers UC Davis Genome Center, full member NICHD National Children’s Study, Autism Speaks subgroup on environmental exposures Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Center for Autism Research, Distinguished Lecture C. Selected peer-reviewed publications 15 most relevant publications (selected from 51) LaSalle JM and M. Lalande, 1996. Homologous association of oppositely imprinted chromosomal domains. Science. 272:725-728. PMCID: 8614834 LaSalle JM., R. Ritchie, H. Glatt, and M. Lalande. 1998. Clonal heterogeneity at allelic methylation sites diagnostic for Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 95:1675-1680. PMCID: 9465075 Balmer D and LaSalle JM. 2001. Clonal maintenance of imprinted expression of SNRPN and IPW in normal lymphocytes: Correlation with allele-specific methylation of SNRPN intron 1 but not intron 7. Hum. Genet.;108:116-122. PMCID: 11281449 Balmer D, Arredondo J, Samaco RC, and LaSalle JM. 2002. MECP2 mutations in Rett syndrome adversely affect lymphocyte growth but do not affect imprinted gene expression in blood or brain. Hum. Genet., 110:545-552. PMCID: 12107440 Samaco RC, Nagarajan RP, Braunschweig D, and LaSalle JM. 2004. Multiple pathways regulate MeCP2 expression in normal human brain development and exhibit defects in autism-spectrum disorders. Hum. Mol. Genet. 13:629-639. PMCID: 14734626 Samaco RC, Hogart A, and LaSalle JM. 2005. Epigenetic overlap in autism-spectrum neurodevelopmental disorders: MECP2 deficiency causes reduced expression of UBE3A and GABRB3. Hum. Mol. Genet. 14:483-492. PMCID: 15615769 Thatcher KN, Peddada S, Yasui DH, and LaSalle JM. 2005. Homologous pairing of 15q11-13 imprinted domains in brain is developmentally regulated but deficient in Rett and autism samples. Hum. Mol. Genet. 14:785-797. PMCID: 15689352 Nagarajan RP, Hogart A, Gwye Y, Martin M, and LaSalle JM. 2006. Reduced MeCP2 expression is frequent in autism frontal cortex and correlates with aberrant MECP2 promoter methylation Epigenetics, 4:172-182. PMCID: 17486179 Hogart A, Nagarajan RP, Patzel KA, Yasui DH, LaSalle JM. 2007. 15q11-13 GABAA receptor genes are normally biallelically expressed in brain yet are subject to epigenetic dysregulation in autism-spectrum disorders. Hum. Mol. Genet. 16:691-703. PMCID: 17339270 Yasui DH, Peddada S, Bieda MC, Vallero RO, Hogart A, Nagarajan RP, Thatcher KN, Farnham PJ, LaSalle JM. 2007. Integrated epigenomic analyses of neuronal MeCP2 reveal a role for long-range interaction with active genes. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 104:19416-19421. PMCID: 18042715 Wang NJ, Parokonny AS, Thatcher KN, Driscoll J, Malone BM, Sigman M, LaSalle JM, Schanen NC. 2008. Multiple forms of atypical rearrangements generating supernumerary derivative chromosome 15, BMC Genetics, 9:2. PMCID: 18177502 Hogart A, Patzel KA, and LaSalle JM. 2008. Gender influences monoallelic expression of ATP10A in human brain. Hum. Genet., 124:235-242. PMID: 18726118, NIHMSID # 88432, in process Hogart A, Leung KN, Wang NJ, Wu DJ, Driscoll J, Vallero RO, Schanen NC, LaSalle JM. 2008. Chromosome 15q11-13 duplication syndrome brain reveals epigenetic alterations in gene expression not predicted from copy number. J. Med. Genet., 46:86-93. PMCID: 18835857 Swanberg SE, Nagarajan RP, Peddada S, Yasui DH, LaSalle JM. 2009. Reciprocal co-regulation of EGR2 and MECP2 is disrupted in Rett syndrome and autism. Hum. Mol Genet. 18:525-534. PMCID: 19000991 Leung KN, Vallero RO, DuBose AJ, Resnick JL, LaSalle JM. 2009. Imprinting regulates mammalian snoRNAencoding chromatin decondensation and neuronal nucleolar size. Hum. Mol. Genet., 18:4227-4238. PMCID: 19656775 PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 05/01) Page Continuation Format Page Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, First, Middle): D. Research Support. Active Epigenetic etiologies of autism-spectrum disorders P.I., J.M. LaSalle NIH 1R01HD048799 8/10/05 to 5/30/10 (3/1/10 to 2/28/10 no cost extension) The major goals of this project are 1) to determine the effect of MeCP2 on gene expression within 15q11-13; 2) to determine the mechanism by which MeCP2 organizes and regulates gene expression within 15q11-13; 3) to screen for defects in MeCP2 and 15q11-13 gene expression in autism brain samples. Epigenetic Interaction of MECP2 and Organic Pollutants in Neurodevelopment P.I., J. M. LaSalle NIH 1R01ES015171 9/21/06 to 8/30/10 The major goals of this project are 1) to investigate behavioral effects of perinatal exposure to PCB 95 and PBDE 47 in wild-type and Mecp2308 mice; 2) to investigate epigenetic effects on expression levels of MECP2, UBE3A, and GABRB3; 3) to investigate epigenetic alterations in brain and blood samples from children with autism and mental retardation and correlate with levels of POPs; 4) test the heritability of epigenetic alterations caused by POP exposure. The Role of MECP2 in Rett Syndrome P.I., J. M. LaSalle, Ph.D. NIH 2R01HD041462 7/1/02 to 3/31/12 The major goals of this project are 1) determine dynamic changes in sub-nuclear localization, protein association, and post-translational modifications and differences between MeCP2e1 and MeCP2e2 isoforms; 2) investigate dynamic developmental changes in nuclear protein association and sub-nuclear localization of MeCP2 target genes; 3) identify novel target genes of MeCP2 by a genomic ChIP-chip approach and test their relevance to the pathogenesis of RTT. Interdisciplinary Training for Autism Researchers P.I., S.L. Rogers, Ph.D. T32 MH73124 Faculty trainer, J.M. LaSalle, Ph.D NIH Kirschstein-NRSA postdoctoral training grant 9/29/04 – 7/31/14 The M.I.N.D. Institute at the University of California-Davis is offering a postdoctoral training program to prepare Ph.D. and M.D. fellows for careers in autism research. The goal of this program is to train truly interdisciplinary autism research scientists. The M.I.N.D. Institute and UC Davis provide a unique environment for conducting postdoctoral research on aspects of autism. Past three years The Role of MECP2 in Rett Syndrome P.I., J. M. LaSalle, Ph.D. Autism Speaks Bridge Funding Award 02/01/08 to 1/31/09 The major goals of this project are to determine dynamic changes in sub-nuclear localization, protein association, and post-translational modifications and differences between MeCP2e1 and MeCP2e2 isoforms. Investigation of Novel MeCP2 Target Genes Regulating Neuronal Maturation P.I., J.M. LaSalle Rett Syndrome Research Foundation PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 05/01) Page Continuation Format Page Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, First, Middle): 10/1/05 to 9/30/08 The major goals of this project are 1) to characterize the effect of MeCP2 deficiency on the ID family of transcriptional regulators; 2) to determine the functional relevance of ID regulatory proteins to the pathogenesis of Rett syndrome. iCys Laser Scanning Cytometer for UC Davis Core P.I., J. M. LaSalle NIH 1S10RR024747 05/01/08 to 04/31/09 This is a shared instrumentation grant to support the purchase of the next generation laser scanning cytometer for the UC Davis core facility. Epigenetics of X-linked Genes in PBC: Does X Mark the Spot? P.I., C. Selmi Collaborator, J.M. LaSalle NIH 1R21 DK075400-01 7/01/06 to 6/30/09 The major goals of this project are 1) to determine if altered expression of 125 differentially inactivated X-linked genes are found in monozygotic female twins discordant for the autoimmune disorder primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC); 2) to determine the methylation patterns of X-linked genes differentially expressed in affected and unaffected twins by bisulfite sequencing. PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 05/01) Page Continuation Format Page