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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Epigenetic dysregulation in the developing Down syndrome cortex

Danuta GaletzkaThomas HaafMarcus DittrichIndrajit NandaLarissa SeidmannTobias MüllerNady El HajjEberhard SchneiderTheo F. J. KrausJulia BöckTim Tralau

subject

Adult0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchDown syndromeDown syndromeNeuronal OutgrowthDNMT3BProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesBiologyDNA Methyltransferase 3AEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesfetal brain developmentddc:570medicineHumansDNA (Cytosine-5-)-MethyltransferasesEpigeneticsddc:610Molecular BiologyCerebral CortexGeneticsDNA methylationfrontal cortexGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalChromosomeMethylationProtein-Tyrosine KinasesCadherinsmedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyprotocadherin gamma cluster030104 developmental biologyCpG siteDNA methylationChromosome 21Research Paper

description

Using Illumina 450K arrays, 1.85% of all analyzed CpG sites were significantly hypermethylated and 0.31% hypomethylated in fetal Down syndrome (DS) cortex throughout the genome. The methylation changes on chromosome 21 appeared to be balanced between hypo- and hyper-methylation, whereas, consistent with prior reports, all other chromosomes showed 3–11 times more hyper- than hypo-methylated sites. Reduced NRSF/REST expression due to upregulation of DYRK1A (on chromosome 21q22.13) and methylation of REST binding sites during early developmental stages may contribute to this genome-wide excess of hypermethylated sites. Upregulation of DNMT3L (on chromosome 21q22.4) could lead to de novo methylation in neuroprogenitors, which then persists in the fetal DS brain where DNMT3A and DNMT3B become downregulated. The vast majority of differentially methylated promoters and genes was hypermethylated in DS and located outside chromosome 21, including the protocadherin gamma (PCDHG) cluster on chromosome 5q31, which is crucial for neural circuit formation in the developing brain. Bisulfite pyrosequencing and targeted RNA sequencing showed that several genes of PCDHG subfamilies A and B are hypermethylated and transcriptionally downregulated in fetal DS cortex. Decreased PCDHG expression is expected to reduce dendrite arborization and growth in cortical neurons. Since constitutive hypermethylation of PCDHG and other genes affects multiple tissues, including blood, it may provide useful biomarkers for DS brain development and pharmacologic targets for therapeutic interventions.

10.1080/15592294.2016.1192736https://opus.bibliothek.uni-wuerzburg.de/files/19123/El_Hajj_Epigenetics_2016.pdf