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Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue

Psychiatric stress has been associated with accelerated epigenetic aging (i.e., when estimates of cellular age based on DNA methylation exceed chronological age) in both blood and brain tissue. Little is known about the downstream biological effects of accelerated epigenetic age on gene expression....

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Autores principales: Wolf, Erika J., Zhao, Xiang, Hawn, Sage E., Morrison, Filomene G., Zhou, Zhenwei, Fein-Schaffer, Dana, Huber, Bertrand, Miller, Mark W., Logue, Mark W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8377489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34458511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100371
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author Wolf, Erika J.
Zhao, Xiang
Hawn, Sage E.
Morrison, Filomene G.
Zhou, Zhenwei
Fein-Schaffer, Dana
Huber, Bertrand
Miller, Mark W.
Logue, Mark W.
author_facet Wolf, Erika J.
Zhao, Xiang
Hawn, Sage E.
Morrison, Filomene G.
Zhou, Zhenwei
Fein-Schaffer, Dana
Huber, Bertrand
Miller, Mark W.
Logue, Mark W.
author_sort Wolf, Erika J.
collection PubMed
description Psychiatric stress has been associated with accelerated epigenetic aging (i.e., when estimates of cellular age based on DNA methylation exceed chronological age) in both blood and brain tissue. Little is known about the downstream biological effects of accelerated epigenetic age on gene expression. In this study we examined associations between DNA methylation-derived estimates of cellular age that range from decelerated to accelerated relative to chronological age (“DNAm age residuals”) and transcriptome-wide gene expression. This was examined using tissue from three post-mortem cortical regions (ventromedial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and motor cortex, n = 97) from the VA National PTSD Brain Bank. In addition, we examined how posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol-use disorders (AUD) moderated the association between DNAm age residuals and gene expression. Transcriptome-wide results across brain regions, psychiatric diagnoses, and cohorts (full sample and male and female subsets) revealed experiment-wide differential expression of 11 genes in association with PTSD or AUD in interaction with DNAm age residuals. This included the inflammation-related genes IL1B, RCOR2, and GCNT1. Candidate gene class analyses and gene network enrichment analyses further supported differential expression of inflammation/immune gene networks as well as glucocorticoid, circadian, and oxidative stress-related genes. Gene co-expression network modules suggested enrichment of myelination related processes and oligodendrocyte enrichment in association with DNAm age residuals in the presence of psychopathology. Collectively, results suggest that psychiatric stress accentuates the association between advanced epigenetic age and expression of inflammation genes in the brain. This highlights the role of inflammatory processes in the pathophysiology of accelerated cellular aging and suggests that inflammatory pathways may link accelerated cellular aging to premature disease onset and neurodegeneration, particularly in stressed populations. This suggests that anti-inflammatory interventions may be an important direction to pursue in evaluating ways to prevent or delay cellular aging and increase resilience to diseases of aging.
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spelling pubmed-83774892021-08-26 Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue Wolf, Erika J. Zhao, Xiang Hawn, Sage E. Morrison, Filomene G. Zhou, Zhenwei Fein-Schaffer, Dana Huber, Bertrand Miller, Mark W. Logue, Mark W. Neurobiol Stress Article from the Special Issue on Genetics of stress ; Edited by Kellie Tamashiro and Nikolaos Daskalakis Psychiatric stress has been associated with accelerated epigenetic aging (i.e., when estimates of cellular age based on DNA methylation exceed chronological age) in both blood and brain tissue. Little is known about the downstream biological effects of accelerated epigenetic age on gene expression. In this study we examined associations between DNA methylation-derived estimates of cellular age that range from decelerated to accelerated relative to chronological age (“DNAm age residuals”) and transcriptome-wide gene expression. This was examined using tissue from three post-mortem cortical regions (ventromedial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and motor cortex, n = 97) from the VA National PTSD Brain Bank. In addition, we examined how posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol-use disorders (AUD) moderated the association between DNAm age residuals and gene expression. Transcriptome-wide results across brain regions, psychiatric diagnoses, and cohorts (full sample and male and female subsets) revealed experiment-wide differential expression of 11 genes in association with PTSD or AUD in interaction with DNAm age residuals. This included the inflammation-related genes IL1B, RCOR2, and GCNT1. Candidate gene class analyses and gene network enrichment analyses further supported differential expression of inflammation/immune gene networks as well as glucocorticoid, circadian, and oxidative stress-related genes. Gene co-expression network modules suggested enrichment of myelination related processes and oligodendrocyte enrichment in association with DNAm age residuals in the presence of psychopathology. Collectively, results suggest that psychiatric stress accentuates the association between advanced epigenetic age and expression of inflammation genes in the brain. This highlights the role of inflammatory processes in the pathophysiology of accelerated cellular aging and suggests that inflammatory pathways may link accelerated cellular aging to premature disease onset and neurodegeneration, particularly in stressed populations. This suggests that anti-inflammatory interventions may be an important direction to pursue in evaluating ways to prevent or delay cellular aging and increase resilience to diseases of aging. Elsevier 2021-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8377489/ /pubmed/34458511 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100371 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article from the Special Issue on Genetics of stress ; Edited by Kellie Tamashiro and Nikolaos Daskalakis
Wolf, Erika J.
Zhao, Xiang
Hawn, Sage E.
Morrison, Filomene G.
Zhou, Zhenwei
Fein-Schaffer, Dana
Huber, Bertrand
Miller, Mark W.
Logue, Mark W.
Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title_full Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title_fullStr Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title_full_unstemmed Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title_short Gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
title_sort gene expression correlates of advanced epigenetic age and psychopathology in postmortem cortical tissue
topic Article from the Special Issue on Genetics of stress ; Edited by Kellie Tamashiro and Nikolaos Daskalakis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8377489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34458511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100371
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