Epigenetic signatures of methylated DNA cytosine in Alzheimer's disease

Citation:

Irfete S Fetahu, Dingailu Ma, Kimberlie Rabidou, Christian Argueta, Michael SMITH, Hang Liu, Feizhen Wu, and Yujiang G Shi. 2019. “Epigenetic signatures of methylated DNA cytosine in Alzheimer's disease.” Sci Adv, 5, 8, Pp. eaaw2880.

Abstract:

Alzheimer's disease (AD), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, is the most common untreatable form of dementia. Identifying molecular biomarkers that allow early detection remains a key challenge in the diagnosis, treatment, and prognostic evaluation of the disease. Here, we report a novel experimental and analytical model characterizing epigenetic alterations during AD onset and progression. We generated the first integrated base-resolution genome-wide maps of the distribution of 5-methyl-cytosine (5mC), 5-hydroxymethyl-cytosine (5hmC), and 5-formyl/carboxy-cytosine (5fC/caC) in normal and AD neurons. We identified 27 AD region-specific and 39 CpG site-specific epigenetic signatures that were independently validated across our familial and sporadic AD models, and in an independent clinical cohort. Thus, our work establishes a new model and strategy to study the epigenetic alterations underlying AD onset and progression and provides a set of highly reliable AD-specific epigenetic signatures that may have early diagnostic and prognostic implications.