Dysregulated glial genes in Alzheimer's disease are essential for homeostatic plasticity: Evidence from integrative epigenetic and single cell analyses

Author:

Cai Yimei1,Cui Tao12,Yin Pengqi1,Paganelli Paxton1,Vicini Stefano12,Wang Tingting12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology & Physiology Georgetown University Medical Center Washington D.C. USA

2. Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience Georgetown University Medical Center Washington D.C. USA

Abstract

AbstractSynaptic homeostatic plasticity is a foundational regulatory mechanism that maintains the stability of synaptic and neural functions within the nervous system. Impairment of homeostatic regulation has been linked to synapse destabilization during the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent epigenetic and transcriptomic characterizations of the nervous system have revealed intricate molecular details about the aging brain and the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. Yet, how abnormal epigenetic and transcriptomic alterations in different cell types in AD affect synaptic homeostatic plasticity remains to be elucidated. Various glial cell types play critical roles in modulating synaptic functions both during the aging process and in the context of AD. Here, we investigated the impact of glial dysregulation of histone acetylation and transcriptome in AD on synaptic homeostatic plasticity, using computational analysis combined with electrophysiological methods in Drosophila. By integrating snRNA‐seq and H3K9ac ChIP‐seq data from the same AD patient cohort, we pinpointed cell type‐specific signature genes that were transcriptionally altered by histone acetylation. We subsequently investigated the role of these glial genes in regulating presynaptic homeostatic potentiation in Drosophila. Remarkably, nine glial‐specific genes, which were identified through our computational method as targets of H3K9ac and transcriptional dysregulation, were found to be crucial for the regulation of synaptic homeostatic plasticity in Drosophila. Our genetic evidence connects abnormal glial transcriptomic changes in AD with the impairment of homeostatic plasticity in the nervous system. In summary, our integrative computational and genetic studies highlight specific glial genes as potential key players in the homeostatic imbalance observed in AD.

Funder

Brain and Behavior Research Foundation

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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