神经退行性变
生物
阿尔茨海默病
DNA损伤
遗传学
体细胞
早老素
疾病
神经科学
基因
DNA
医学
病理
作者
Michael B. Miller,August Yue Huang,Jun Ho Kim,Zinan Zhou,Samantha L. Kirkham,Eduardo A. Maury,Jennifer S. Ziegenfuss,Hannah C. Reed,Jennifer E. Neil,Lariza M. Rento,Steven C. Ryu,C. Chanthia,Lovelace J. Luquette,Heather M. Ames,Derek H. Oakley,Matthew P. Frosch,Bradley T. Hyman,Michael A. Lodato,Eunjung Alice Lee,Christopher A. Walsh
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2022-04-20
卷期号:604 (7907): 714-722
被引量:112
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-04640-1
摘要
Dementia in Alzheimer’s disease progresses alongside neurodegeneration1–4, but the specific events that cause neuronal dysfunction and death remain poorly understood. During normal ageing, neurons progressively accumulate somatic mutations5 at rates similar to those of dividing cells6,7 which suggests that genetic factors, environmental exposures or disease states might influence this accumulation5. Here we analysed single-cell whole-genome sequencing data from 319 neurons from the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and neurotypical control individuals. We found that somatic DNA alterations increase in individuals with Alzheimer’s disease, with distinct molecular patterns. Normal neurons accumulate mutations primarily in an age-related pattern (signature A), which closely resembles ‘clock-like’ mutational signatures that have been previously described in healthy and cancerous cells6–10. In neurons affected by Alzheimer’s disease, additional DNA alterations are driven by distinct processes (signature C) that highlight C>A and other specific nucleotide changes. These changes potentially implicate nucleotide oxidation4,11, which we show is increased in Alzheimer’s-disease-affected neurons in situ. Expressed genes exhibit signature-specific damage, and mutations show a transcriptional strand bias, which suggests that transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair has a role in the generation of mutations. The alterations in Alzheimer’s disease affect coding exons and are predicted to create dysfunctional genetic knockout cells and proteostatic stress. Our results suggest that known pathogenic mechanisms in Alzheimer’s disease may lead to genomic damage to neurons that can progressively impair function. The aberrant accumulation of DNA alterations in neurodegeneration provides insight into the cascade of molecular and cellular events that occurs in the development of Alzheimer’s disease. Analyses of single-cell whole-genome sequencing data show that somatic mutations are increased in the brain of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease compared to neurotypical individuals, with a pattern of genomic damage distinct from that of normal ageing.
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