4.8 Article

Neuron-specific methylome analysis reveals epigenetic regulation and tau-related dysfunction of BRCA1 in Alzheimer's disease

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707151114

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; methylome; DNA repair; BRCA1

Funding

  1. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development Strategic Research Program for Brain Sciences [15656513]
  2. Japan Science and Technology Agency Precursory Research for Embryonic Science and Technology [4216]
  3. Japan Society of Promotion of Science KAKENHI [16H05319, 17H16113]
  4. Cell Science Research Foundation
  5. Ichiro Kanehara Foundation for the Promotion of Medical Sciences and Medical Care
  6. Takeda Science Foundation
  7. Janssen Pharmaceutical
  8. Eisai Company
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16K09664, 16H05319, 15K08297, 17H05687, 16H06297, 17K16113, 16H06277] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a chronic neurodegenerative disease characterized by pathology of accumulated amyloid beta (A beta) and phosphorylated tau proteins in the brain. Postmortem degradation and cellular complexity within the brain have limited approaches to molecularly define the causal relationship between pathological features and neuronal dysfunction in AD. To overcome these limitations, we analyzed the neuron-specific DNA methylome of postmortem brain samples from AD patients, which allowed differentially hypomethylated region of the BRCA1 promoter to be identified. Expression of BRCA1 was significantly up-regulated in AD brains, consistent with its hypomethylation. BRCA1 protein levels were also elevated in response to DNA damage induced by A beta. BRCA1 became mislocalized to the cytoplasm and highly insoluble in a tau-dependent manner, resulting in DNA fragmentation in both in vitro cellular and in vivo mouse models. BRCA1 dysfunction under A beta burden is consistent with concomitant deterioration of genomic integrity and synaptic plasticity. The Brca1 promoter region of AD model mice brain was similarly hypomethylated, indicating an epigenetic mechanism underlying BRCA1 regulation in AD. Our results suggest deterioration of DNA integrity as a central contributing factor in AD pathogenesis. Moreover, these data demonstrate the technical feasibility of using neuron-specific DNA methylome analysis to facilitate discovery of etiological candidates in sporadic neurodegenerative diseases.

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