Epigenetic alterations mediate iPSC normalization of DNA-repair expression and TNR stability in Huntington's disease

Author:

Mollica Peter A.12ORCID,Zamponi Martina13ORCID,Reid John A.13ORCID,Sharma Deepak K.1ORCID,White Alyson E.1ORCID,Ogle Roy C.1ORCID,Bruno Robert D.1ORCID,Sachs Patrick C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Diagnostic and Translational Sciences, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia, 23529, USA

2. Molecular Diagnostics Laboratory, Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, Norfolk, Virginia, 23507, USA

3. Biomedical Engineering Institute, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia, 23529, USA

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is a rare autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by a cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) trinucleotide repeat (TNR) expansion within the HTT gene. The mechanisms underlying HD-associated cellular dysfunction during pluripotency and neurodevelopment, are poorly understood. Here we tested the hypothesis that hypomethylation during cellular reprogramming leads to up-regulation of DNA repair genes and stabilization of TNRs in HD cells. We sought to determine how the HD TNR region is affected by global epigenetic changes through cellular reprogramming and early neurodifferentiation. We find that early-stage HD-affected neural stem cells (NSCs) contain increased levels of global 5-hydroxymethylation (5-hmC) and normalized DNA repair gene expression. We confirm TNR stability is induced during pluripotency, and maintained in HD-NSCs. We also identify up-regulation of 5-hmC catalyzing ten-eleven translocation (TET1/2) proteins, and show their knockdown leads to a corresponding decrease in select DNA repair gene expression. We further confirm decreased expression of TET regulating miR-29 family members in HD-NSCs. Our findings demonstrate that mechanisms involved in pluripotency recover the selected DNA repair gene expression and stabilizes pathogenic TNRs in HD.

Funder

Old Dominion University

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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