1 / 31

MECHANISMS OF AGE-RELATED COGNITIVE CHANGE AND TARGETS FOR INTERVENTION: EPIGENETICS

MECHANISMS OF AGE-RELATED COGNITIVE CHANGE AND TARGETS FOR INTERVENTION: EPIGENETICS. MADIHAH MOHAMAD, EIZZATI ARIPIN, SITI ZULAIHA ABU BAKAR. AGING AND EPIGENETIC. Changes- cognitive fx , brain anatomy, physiology and neurochemistry

Télécharger la présentation

MECHANISMS OF AGE-RELATED COGNITIVE CHANGE AND TARGETS FOR INTERVENTION: EPIGENETICS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MECHANISMS OF AGE-RELATED COGNITIVE CHANGE AND TARGETS FOR INTERVENTION: EPIGENETICS MADIHAH MOHAMAD, EIZZATI ARIPIN, SITI ZULAIHA ABU BAKAR

  2. AGING AND EPIGENETIC • Changes- cognitive fx, brain anatomy, physiology and neurochemistry • Rate + magnitude of changes varies across individuals, brain regions and functional domains • Epigenetic mech.- potent regulators of gene expression, unrelated to changes in DNA sequence. • “Cognitive Neuroepigenetics”- research on psychiatric illness, addiction, neurodegenerative diseases. • Research on potential epigenetic contributions to age-related cognitive change has only recently emerged

  3. Cognitive Aging Summit II • U. of Alabama, Birmingham: survey on DNA mathylation and other epigenetic mech in learning and memory, cog epigenetic of aging • U of California, Santa Barbara: role of miRNAs affecting large scale protein networks in aging process • Broad Ins. And Massachusetts Ins. of Tech.: dev of preclinical strategies in mouse models targeting reg of histone acethylation to repress transc + translation to reduce synaptic plasticity in aged brain. • Columbia U: human cognitive aging, signif. of regional vulnerability in hippocampusin relation of age mediated effects on mediators of histone acethylation. • Concluding comments: major themes, future directions and challenges to progress.

  4. EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN MEMORY FORMATION • Age-related memory decline = prominently in declarative/episodic and working memory, • memory modalities = based largely in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex • Memory and synaptic plasticity associated with transcription of immediate-early genes (IEGs) including : • Arc (activity-regulated cytoskeletal gene) • Zi1268 (also known as nerve growth factor inducible-A, and early growth response gene) • BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor • Consolidation of memory = prevented by blocking the expression oh these genes • Normal aging = results from decreased immediate-early gene expression (as seen in some models of memory disorders)

  5. The relevant epigenetic mechanisms include histone posttranslational modifications and DNA methylation (recently discovered) = to control hippocampal synaptic plasticity and long-term memory formation • Involving : • the covalent chemical modification of histones by histoneacetyltransferases and histonedeacetylases (HDACs) • covalent modification of DNA by DNA methyltransferases • Epigenetic mechanisms = powerful controllers of memory-associated gene transcription (typically result : transcriptional silencing + loss of gene function) • aging-related cognitive dysfunction = caused by dysregulation of epigenetic control mechanisms and accumulation of aberrant epigenetic marks • transcription of key memory-promoting genes = decline during aging

  6. An assessment of memory formation-associated DNA methylation in the aged rat hippocampus (Carol Barnes‘ research group ) = to determine if aging is associated with a disruption of epigenomic signalling • Process : • 1st group of animals screened using spatial version of the Morris swim task = to confirm that the aged animals exhibited impaired memory • Animals explored (training) a novel environment for 5 mins (a week later) = treatment that results in both new memory formation • Animals rested in cage for 25 mins • Decapitation under deep isofluraneanesthesia • Extraction and dissection of hippocampus into CA1 and dentate gyrus samples = to get DNA and processed for bisulfite modification, methylation state was determined for the Arc gene via sequencing of control and bisulfite-treated DNA • 2nd group (directly from cage) = to determine resting levels of DNA methylation of the Arc gene in hippocampus

  7. Results : • Revealed a distinct pattern of methylation of the Arc gene within the aged hippocampus • In CA1 = young adult and aged rat showed significant and comparable demethlation of Arc DNA (in response to spatial exploration) • In dentate gyrus = aged rats showed less DNA methylation + significantly increased methylation of Arc gene following spatial learning • Aging = accompanied by significant alterations in epigenomic signaling + changes specifically targeting the memory-promoting gene Arc

  8. MIRNAs Hold The Potential To Reveal A Genetic Architecture Of Aging

  9. Biological aging: • Internal biological clock • Accumulation of insults to the organism • Lifespan of a species: • Biological aging • Life span of an individual: • Specific environmental circumstances (accumulated insults) • Individual differences of biological clock • These 2 facets operate at every level of biological hierarchy (genes, proteins, cells, organs, systems, organisms).

  10. The 1st of relevant genetic pathways: • Discovered in 1993 • Cynthia Kenyon found that a single gene mutation in daf-2 could double the lifespan of Caenorhabditiselegans • Could be reversed by a second mutation of daf-16m. • The following relevant genetic pathway: • Using the previous system • Discovered by Victor Ambrose • A novel class of posttranscriptional gene regulators called miRNAs.

  11. Victor Ambrose’s discovery: • miRNAs form RNA-RNA duplex housed in RNA-induced silencing complex  partially silencing the translation of target mRNAs • A single miRNA targets multiple mRNAs • Recent findings suggest that their exquisite tissue specificity may open a door to the congnitive aging problem • Although several studies indicate that miRNA profiles change with age, the precise association of specific aging models is unclear • A coherent set of pathways related to aging will emerge • miRNA levels can be exogenously manipulated; • Upregulated – delivery of precursor miRNAs • Downregulated – delivery of locked nucleic acid antisense sequences

  12. Sets of miRNA targets are often functionally related • Demonstrated property in cancer: • Sets of mRNA targets that are all related to p53 pathway in onco-miR, miR-21 (16) • miR-128 = tumor suppressor miRNA that targets the functionally related genes within tyrosine kinase receptor pathways • Shows the role of miRNAs in modulating entire networks in a distributed and robust manner by main small changes in protein levels among many components of network

  13. miRNA approach to modulating function differs radically from a classic pharmacological approach • The flaws in pharmaceutical approach: • Pathways are highly redundant • Inhibiting any single component  compensatory response • Identify & manipulate miRNAs that target multiple mRNAs (related to aging)  modulate some facets of aging

  14. Genes related to aging at a cellular level are tumor suppressor genes: • Frequent miRNA target • Their depression  reduced level of specific miRNAs  accelerate an aging phenotype • e.g. genes at the Ink4/Arf locus activated  proliferation reduced anticancer mechanism may contribute to the attrition of stem cells with aging

  15. miRNAs have important roles in stem cells as pluripotent cells pass through stages of increasingly restricted potential until they reach terminal differentiation • Biological aging begins the moment cells exit pluripotency • Pluripotency terminal differentiation can be tracked by a set of miRNA changes • Each discrete stage in a cell’s lineage is marked by a defining miRNA profile • Unraveling the complex target networks of miRNAs could offer important new insight into the aging process

  16. Histone Acetylation and Histone Deacetylases in Mouse Models of Neurodegenration

  17. Alzheimer’s disease (AD): • Age related neurodegenrative disorder associated with severe memory impairment • Prominent feature – the progressive loss of forebrain neurons and deterioration of learning and memory • No significantly effective treatment yet • The development of alternative therapeutic approaches is an absolute necessity

  18. Epigenetic: • Study of changes in gene expression that are mediated by mechanisms other than changes in DNA sequence • e.g. chromatin remodeling – patterns of gene expression are modulated via the alteration of chromatin structure • Increased histone acetylation  more relaxed chromatin structure  increased gene expression • Histone acetylation – regulated by the opposing activities of 2 groups of enzymes (the histone acetyltransferase + HDACs)

  19. Class I HDACs (HDAC 1, 2, 3): • Primarily found within nucleus • Regulate histone acetylation + suppress gene expression • Recruited to the promoter regions of genes via transcriptional repressor and corepressor proteins • Recent studies – histone acetylation – learning and memory • Increased histone acetylation after various learning paradigms • After HDACi treatment, facilitation of synaptic plasticity and memory formation • Thus, increased histone acetylation facilitates cognitive function

  20. CK-p25 mouse model experiment: • Nonselective HDACi sodium butyrate  improves cognitive performance (even after severe neurodegeneration) • HDACissuberoylanilidehydroxamic acid + phenylbutyrate  reinstate learning behaviour in AD mouse • They showed elevated H4 acetylation + increased production of proteins implicated in synaptic function • Treatment with HDACis has emerged as a promising new strategy for therapeutic intervention in neurodegeneration

  21. Overexpression of HADC2 in mouse neurons  striking impairment of memory formation + synaptic plasticity (not observed in overexpression of HDAC1) + reduced hippocampal H4K12 and H4K5 acetylation *other marks not affected • HDAC2 knockout mice (not HDAC1 knockout mice)  increased H4K12 and H4K5 acetylation + enhanced learning, memory, synaptic plasticity + rare model of cognitive enhancement

  22. HDAC2: • Learning and memory • Synaptic plasticity • Regulation of H4K12 (dysregulation is implicated in age-associated memory impairment) • Enriched on the promoters of genes that are implicated in synaptic remodeling and plasticity or that are regulated by neuronal activity (based on immunoprecipitation) • Administration of suberoylanilidehydroxamic acid fails to further increase synaptic plasticity in HDAC2 knockout mice  HDAC2 appears to be the major target of HDACi in eliciting memory enhancement

  23. Conclusion from the observations: • Dysregulation of chromatin remodeling cognitive impairment • Chronic abnormalities in histone acetylation (dysfunction of HDAC or histone acetyltransferase enzymes)  aberrant expression of genes for learning and memory + synaptic plasticity + synaptogenesis  brain in a “locked” state (i.e. probability of the activity-dependent expression of plasticity is reduced)

  24. The Dentate Gyrus in Cognitive Aging: Is HistoneAcetylation The Molecular Link??

  25. The Dentate Gyrus and Cognitive Aging • Frontal cortex and the hippocampal formation: strongly implicated in age-related memory decline • Hippocampal formation made up of: • Entorhinal cortex • Dentate gyrus • CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cell fields • subiculum

  26. The Dentate Gyrus and Cognitive Aging

  27. The Dentate Gyrus and Cognitive Aging

  28. The Dentate Gyrus and Cognitive Aging • Each hippocampalsubregion expresses a unique malecular profile  this is why individual subregions are differentially vulnerable to disease • Age-related hippocampaldysf(x) due to: • Absence of neuron loss • Pathognomonic histological features

  29. The Aging Dentate Gyrus and HistoneAcetylation • Histoneacetylation epigenetically regulates transcription • Dentate gyrus differentially engages this pathway • Unique feature of dentate gyrus is, it supports neurogenesis late into development, even into postnatal period • Histoneacetylation is a critical pathway for neuronal differentioation • Age- related defects in histoneacetylation play an important role in age-related dentate gyrusdysf(x)

  30. The Aging Dentate Gyrus and HistoneAcetylation • Aging dentate gyrus age-related changes in molecules that regulate histoneacetylation • Therapeutic intervention: • Any interventions that ameliorate age-related hippocampaldysf(x), will improve the f(x) of dentate gyrus (via histoneacetylation pathway) • Physical excersice • Improving glucose control in DM

  31. Concluding Comments • Cognitive aging is multifarious phenomenon • Key challenges: • To identify the precise epigenetic changes • To determine the time scale of their influence • To define how epigenetic mechanisms achieve specificity in the coordination of experience-dependent gene expression profile

More Related