Klein Hans-Ulrich, Bennett David A, De Jager Philip L
Program in Translational Neuropsychiatric Genomics and Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center, Department of Neurology, Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, NRB 168, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Acta Neuropathol. 2016 Oct;132(4):503-14. doi: 10.1007/s00401-016-1612-7. Epub 2016 Aug 29.
The advent of new technologies and analytic approaches is beginning to provide an unprecedented look at features of the human genome that affect RNA expression. These "epigenomic" features are found in a number of different forms: they include DNA methylation, covalent modifications of histone proteins and non-coding RNAs. Some of these features have now been implicated in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we focus on recent studies that have identified robust observations relating to DNA methylation and chromatin in human brain tissue; these findings will ground the next generation of studies and provide a model for the design of such studies. Stemming from observations that compounds with histone deacetylase activity may be beneficial in AD, epigenome-wide studies in cortical samples from large numbers of human subjects have now shown that AD-associated epigenomic changes are reproducible, are not driven by genetic risk factors, and are widespread at specific locations in the genome. A fundamental question of whether such changes are causal remains to be demonstrated, but it is already clear that well-powered investigations of the human epigenome in the target organ of a neurodegenerative disease are feasible, are implicating new areas of the genome in the disease, and will be an important tool for future studies. We are now at an inflection point: as genome-wide association studies of genetic variants come to an end, a new generation of studies exploring the epigenome will provide an important new layer of information with which to enrich our understanding of AD pathogenesis and to possibly guide development of new therapeutic targets.
新技术和分析方法的出现,开始让人们以前所未有的视角审视影响RNA表达的人类基因组特征。这些“表观基因组”特征有多种不同形式:包括DNA甲基化、组蛋白的共价修饰以及非编码RNA。其中一些特征现已被认为与阿尔茨海默病(AD)有关。在此,我们聚焦于近期的研究,这些研究确定了与人类脑组织中DNA甲基化和染色质相关的有力观察结果;这些发现将为下一代研究奠定基础,并为这类研究的设计提供模型。基于组蛋白脱乙酰酶活性化合物可能对AD有益的观察结果,对大量人类受试者的皮质样本进行的全表观基因组研究现已表明,与AD相关的表观基因组变化具有可重复性,并非由遗传风险因素驱动,且在基因组的特定位置广泛存在。这些变化是否具有因果关系这一基本问题仍有待证明,但很明显,对神经退行性疾病靶器官中的人类表观基因组进行有力的研究是可行的,这使基因组的新区域与该疾病产生关联,并且将成为未来研究的重要工具。我们正处于一个转折点:随着对基因变异的全基因组关联研究接近尾声,探索表观基因组的新一代研究将提供重要的新信息层面,用以丰富我们对AD发病机制的理解,并有可能指导新治疗靶点的开发。