Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
DNA methylation analysis on purified neurons and glia dissects age and Alzheimer’s disease-specific changes in the human cortex
Gilles Gasparoni, Sebastian Bultmann, Pavlo Lutsik, Theo F. J. Kraus, Sabrina Sordon, Julia Vlcek, Vanessa Dietinger, Martina Steinmaurer, Melanie Haider, Christopher B. Mulholland, Thomas Arzberger, Sigrun Roeber, Matthias Riemenschneider, Hans A. Kretzschmar, Armin Giese
Epigenetics & Chromatin · 2018 · ▲ 256 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) based on human brain samples allow a deep and direct understanding of epigenetic dysregulation in Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, strong variation of cell-type proportions across brain tissue samples represents a significant source of data noise. Here, we report the first EWAS based on sorted neuronal and non-neuronal (mostly glia) nuclei from postmortem human brain tissues. RESULTS: We show that cell sorting strongly enhances the robust detection of disease-related DNA methylation changes even in a relatively small cohort. We identify numerous genes with cell-type-specific methylation signatures and document differential methylation dynamics associated with aging specifically in neurons such as CLU, SYNJ2 and NCOR2 or in glia RAI1,CXXC5 and INPP5A. Further, we found neuron or glia-specific associations with AD Braak stage progression at genes such as MCF2L, ANK1, MAP2, LRRC8B, STK32C and S100B. A comparison of our study with previous tissue-based EWAS validates multiple AD-associated DNA methylation signals and additionally specifies their origin to neuron, e.g., HOXA3 or glia (ANK1). In a meta-analysis, we reveal two novel previously unrecognized methylation changes at the key AD risk genes APP and ADAM17. CONCLUSIONS: Our data highlight the complex interplay between disease, age and cell-type-specific methylation changes in AD risk genes thus offering new perspectives for the validation and interpretation of large EWAS results.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1186/s13072-018-0211-3
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-09 MST
Cite this
APA
Gasparoni, G., Bultmann, S., Lutsik, P., Kraus, T.F.J., Sordon, S., Vlcek, J., Dietinger, V., Steinmaurer, M., Haider, M., Mulholland, C.B., Arzberger, T., Roeber, S., Riemenschneider, M., Kretzschmar, H.A., Giese, A., Leonhardt, H., & Walter, J. (2018). DNA methylation analysis on purified neurons and glia dissects age and Alzheimer’s disease-specific changes in the human cortex. <em>Epigenetics & Chromatin</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13072-018-0211-3
Vancouver
Gasparoni G, Bultmann S, Lutsik P, Kraus TFJ, Sordon S, Vlcek J, et al. DNA methylation analysis on purified neurons and glia dissects age and Alzheimer’s disease-specific changes in the human cortex. Epigenetics & Chromatin. 2018. doi:10.1186/s13072-018-0211-3.
BibTeX
@article{gilles2018DNAmet,
title = {DNA methylation analysis on purified neurons and glia dissects age and Alzheimer’s disease-specific changes in the human cortex},
author = {Gilles Gasparoni and Sebastian Bultmann and Pavlo Lutsik and Theo F. J. Kraus and Sabrina Sordon and Julia Vlcek and Vanessa Dietinger and Martina Steinmaurer and Melanie Haider and Christopher B. Mulholland and Thomas Arzberger and Sigrun Roeber and Matthias Riemenschneider and Hans A. Kretzschmar and Armin Giese and Heinrich Leonhardt and Jörn Walter},
journal = {Epigenetics & Chromatin},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.1186/s13072-018-0211-3},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Neurobiology of Aging 2013
Citation only
Global changes in DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation in Alzheimer's disease human brain
Genes 2014
Open access · CC-BY
DNA Methylation Biomarkers: Cancer and Beyond
Journal of Alzheimer s Disease 2016
Preprint · OA
Direct Evidence of Internalization of Tau by Microglia In Vitro and In Vivo
International Journal of Epidemiology 2012
Open access · OA
Two-step epigenetic Mendelian randomization: a strategy for establishing the causal role of epigenetic processes in pathways to disease
PLoS ONE 2007
Open access · CC-BY
DNA Methylation in the Human Cerebral Cortex Is Dynamically Regulated throughout the Life Span and Involves Differentiated Neurons
PLoS ONE 2009
Open access · CC-BY