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Age-associated chromatin relaxation is enhanced in Huntington’s disease mice
Author(s) -
Myungsun Park,
Byungkuk Min,
Kyuheum Jeon,
Sunwha Cho,
Jung Sun Park,
Jisun Kim,
Jeha Jeon,
Jinhoi Song,
Seokho Kim,
Sangkyun Jeong,
Hyemyung Seo,
YongKook Kang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.101193
Subject(s) - epigenetics , chromatin , biology , methylation , huntingtin , downregulation and upregulation , gene , dna methylation , genetics , histone , microbiology and biotechnology , gene expression , mutant
Expansion of polyglutamine stretch in the huntingtin (HTT) protein is a major cause of Huntington's disease (HD). The polyglutamine part in HTT interacts with various proteins implicated in epigenetic regulation of genes, suggesting that mutant HTT may disturb the integrity of the epigenetic system. Here, we used a PCRseq-based method to examine expression profile of 395 exonic segments from 260 "epi-driver" genes in splenic T lymphocytes from aged HD mice. We identified 67 exonic segments differentially expressed between young and aged HD mice, most of them upregulated in the aged. Polycomb-repressive complex (PRC)-regulated genes (PRGs) were markedly upregulated in aged HD mice, consistent with downregulation of PRC genes. Epi-driver gene categories of lysine-methylation, lysine-demethylation, arginine-methylation, and PRG showed differential age-associated changes between HD and control. Analyzing the pattern of change in epi-driver gene expressions hinted at an enhanced shift in HD chromatin to a more accessible state with age, which was experimentally demonstrated by DNase-I-hypersensitivity sequencing showing increased chromatin accessibility in HD cells compared to control. We suggest the global change can potentially relieve chromatin-induced repression of many genes, and the unintended expressions of some detrimental proteins could alter T cell function to a greater degree in aged HD mice.

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