Department of Psychiatry, Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Curr Pharm Des. 2013;19(36):6393-415. doi: 10.2174/13816128113199990370.
Sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a prevalent, complex and chronically progressive brain disease. Its course is non-linear, dynamic, adaptive to maladaptive, and compensatory to decompensatory, affecting large-scale neural networks through a plethora of mechanistic and signaling pathway alterations that converge into regional and cell type-specific neurodegeneration and, finally, into clinically overt cognitive and behavioral decline. This decline includes reductions in the activities of daily living, quality of life, independence, and life expectancy. Evolving lines of research suggest that epigenetic mechanisms may play a crucial role during AD development and progression. Epigenetics designates molecular mechanisms that alter gene expression without modifications of the genetic code. This topic includes modifications on DNA and histone proteins, the primary elements of chromatin structure. Accumulating evidence has revealed the relevant processes that mediate epigenetic modifications and has begun to elucidate how these processes are apparently dysregulated in AD. This evidence has led to the clarification of the roles of specific classes of therapeutic compounds that affect epigenetic pathways and characteristics of the epigenome. This insight is accompanied by the development of new methods for studying the global patterns of DNA methylation and chromatin alterations. In particular, high-throughput sequencing approaches, such as next-generation DNA sequencing techniques, are beginning to drive the field into the next stage of development. In parallel, genetic imaging is beginning to answer additional questions through its ability to uncover genetic variants, with or without genome-wide significance, that are related to brain structure, function and metabolism, which impact disease risk and fundamental network-based cognitive processes. Neuroimaging measures can further be used to define AD systems and endophenotypes. The integration of genetic neuroimaging methods with epigenetic markers in humans appears promising. This evolving development may lead to a new research discipline - imaging epigenetics - that will provide deeper insight into the causative pathogenetic and pathophysiological pathways through which genes and environment interrelate during life and impact human brain development, physiology, aging and disease. This knowledge may open doors for the development of novel biomarkers and preventive and disease-modifying treatments.
散发性阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种普遍存在、复杂且呈慢性进行性发展的脑部疾病。其病程呈非线性、动态变化,在适应失调的同时具有代偿能力,通过大量机制和信号通路改变影响大规模神经网络,这些改变汇聚为区域性和细胞类型特异性神经退行性变,最终导致临床上明显的认知和行为能力下降。这种下降包括日常生活活动能力下降、生活质量下降、独立性下降和预期寿命下降。不断发展的研究表明,表观遗传机制可能在 AD 的发展和进展中发挥关键作用。表观遗传学是指在不改变遗传密码的情况下改变基因表达的分子机制。这个主题包括 DNA 和组蛋白蛋白的修饰,它们是染色质结构的主要元素。越来越多的证据揭示了介导表观遗传修饰的相关过程,并开始阐明这些过程在 AD 中是如何明显失调的。这些证据导致了对影响表观遗传途径和表观基因组特征的特定类别的治疗化合物的作用的阐明。这种认识伴随着研究 DNA 甲基化和染色质改变的全局模式的新方法的发展。特别是高通量测序方法,如新一代 DNA 测序技术,开始推动该领域进入下一发展阶段。与此同时,遗传成像开始通过其揭示与大脑结构、功能和代谢相关的具有或不具有全基因组意义的遗传变异的能力来回答更多的问题,这些遗传变异会影响疾病风险和基于网络的基本认知过程。神经影像学测量可进一步用于定义 AD 系统和表型。在人类中整合遗传神经影像学方法和表观遗传标志物似乎很有前途。这种不断发展的发展可能会导致一个新的研究学科 - 影像表观遗传学 - 它将通过提供更深入的了解致病病因和病理生理途径,为基因和环境在生命过程中相互作用并影响人类大脑发育、生理、衰老和疾病提供更深的见解。这些知识可能为开发新的生物标志物和预防及疾病修饰治疗方法打开大门。