Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Neurobiol Dis. 2011 Feb;41(2):279-90. doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2010.09.016. Epub 2010 Sep 29.
Mechanisms determining characteristic age-of-onset for neurological diseases are largely unknown. Normal brain aging associates with robust and progressive transcriptome changes ("molecular aging"), but the intersection with disease pathways is mostly uncharacterized. Here, using cross-cohort microarray analysis of four human brain areas, we show that neurological disease pathways largely overlap with molecular aging and that subjects carrying a newly-characterized low-expressing polymorphism in a putative longevity gene (Sirtuin5; SIRT5(prom2)) have older brain molecular ages. Specifically, molecular aging was remarkably conserved across cohorts and brain areas, and included numerous developmental and transcription-regulator genes. Neurological disease-associated genes were highly overrepresented within age-related genes and changed almost unanimously in pro-disease directions, together suggesting an underlying genetic "program" of aging that progressively promotes disease. To begin testing this putative pathway, we developed and used an age-biosignature to assess five candidate longevity gene polymorphisms' association with molecular aging rates. Most robustly, aging was accelerated in cingulate, but not amygdala, of subjects carrying a SIRT5 promoter polymorphism (+9 years, p=0.004), in concordance with cingulate-specific decreased SIRT5 expression. This effect was driven by a set of core transcripts (+24 years, p=0.0004), many of which were mitochondrial, including Parkinson's disease genes, PINK-1 and DJ-1/PARK7, hence suggesting that SIRT5(prom2) may represent a risk factor for mitochondrial dysfunction-related diseases, including Parkinson's, through accelerated molecular aging of disease-related genes. Based on these results we speculate that a "common mechanism" may underlie age-of-onset across several neurological diseases. Confirming this pathway and its regulation by common genetic variants would provide new strategies for predicting, delaying, and treating neurological diseases.
神经疾病特征发病年龄的机制在很大程度上尚不清楚。正常大脑衰老与强大且不断进展的转录组变化(“分子衰老”)有关,但与疾病途径的交集大多尚未确定。在这里,我们使用四个大脑区域的跨队列微阵列分析表明,神经疾病途径与分子衰老在很大程度上重叠,并且在假定的长寿基因(Sirtuin5;SIRT5(prom2))中携带新表征的低表达多态性的受试者具有较老的大脑分子年龄。具体而言,分子衰老在队列和大脑区域之间具有显著的保守性,并且包括许多发育和转录调节剂基因。神经疾病相关基因在与年龄相关的基因中高度过表达,并且几乎一致地朝着疾病方向变化,这共同表明存在潜在的遗传“程序”衰老,该程序会逐渐促进疾病的发生。为了开始测试该假定途径,我们开发并使用了年龄生物标志物来评估五个候选长寿基因多态性与分子衰老率的关联。携带 SIRT5 启动子多态性的受试者的扣带回(而不是杏仁核)的衰老速度明显加快(+9 岁,p=0.004),这与扣带回特异性的 SIRT5 表达降低一致。这种影响是由一组核心转录物(+24 岁,p=0.0004)驱动的,其中许多是线粒体的,包括帕金森氏病基因 PINK-1 和 DJ-1/PARK7,因此表明 SIRT5(prom2)可能通过加速与疾病相关的基因的分子衰老,代表与线粒体功能障碍相关疾病(包括帕金森氏病)的风险因素。基于这些结果,我们推测在几种神经疾病的发病年龄中可能存在“共同机制”。确认该途径及其受常见遗传变异的调节将为预测、延迟和治疗神经疾病提供新的策略。