Epigenetic changes in Alzheimer's disease: decrements in DNA methylation

D Mastroeni, A Grover, E Delvaux, C Whiteside… - Neurobiology of …, 2010 - Elsevier
D Mastroeni, A Grover, E Delvaux, C Whiteside, PD Coleman, J Rogers
Neurobiology of aging, 2010Elsevier
DNA methylation is a vital component of the epigenetic machinery that orchestrates changes
in multiple genes and helps regulate gene expression in all known vertebrates. We
evaluated immunoreactivity for two markers of DNA methylation and eight methylation
maintenance factors in entorhinal cortex layer II, a region exhibiting substantial Alzheimer's
disease (AD) pathology in which expression changes have been reported for a wide variety
of genes. We show, for the first time, neuronal immunoreactivity for all 10 of the epigenetic …
DNA methylation is a vital component of the epigenetic machinery that orchestrates changes in multiple genes and helps regulate gene expression in all known vertebrates. We evaluated immunoreactivity for two markers of DNA methylation and eight methylation maintenance factors in entorhinal cortex layer II, a region exhibiting substantial Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology in which expression changes have been reported for a wide variety of genes. We show, for the first time, neuronal immunoreactivity for all 10 of the epigenetic markers and factors, with highly significant decrements in AD cases. These decrements were particularly marked in PHF1/PS396 immunoreactive, neurofibrillary tangle-bearing neurons. In addition, two of the DNA methylation maintenance factors, DNMT1 and MBD2, have been reported also to interact with ribosomal RNAs and ribosome synthesis. Consistent with these findings, DNMT1 and MBD2, as well as p66α, exhibited punctate cytoplasmic immunoreactivity that co-localized with the ribosome markers RPL26 and 5.8s rRNA in ND neurons. By contrast, AD neurons generally lacked such staining, and there was a qualitative decrease in RPL26 and 5.8s rRNA immunoreactivity. Collectively, these findings suggest epigenetic dysfunction in AD-vulnerable neurons.
Elsevier