The C9orf72 repeat expansion itself is methylated in ALS and FTLD patients

被引:0
作者
Zhengrui Xi
Ming Zhang
Amalia C. Bruni
Raffaele G. Maletta
Rosanna Colao
Pietro Fratta
James M. Polke
Mary G. Sweeney
Ese Mudanohwo
Benedetta Nacmias
Sandro Sorbi
Maria Carmela Tartaglia
Innocenzo Rainero
Elisa Rubino
Lorenzo Pinessi
Daniela Galimberti
Ezequiel I. Surace
Philip McGoldrick
Paul McKeever
Danielle Moreno
Christine Sato
Yan Liang
Julia Keith
Lorne Zinman
Janice Robertson
Ekaterina Rogaeva
机构
[1] University of Toronto,Tanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative Diseases
[2] Regional Neurogenetic Centre,Department of Neurodegenerative Disease
[3] Azienda Sanitaria Provinciale Catanzaro,Neurogenetics Unit
[4] UCL Institute of Neurology,Department of Neuroscience, Psychology, Drug Research and Child Health (NEUROFARBA)
[5] National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery,Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine
[6] University of Florence,Neurology I, Rita Levi Montalcini Department of Neuroscience
[7] University of Toronto,Neurology Unit, Department of Pathophysiology and Transplantation
[8] University of Torino,Laboratorio de Biología Molecular, Instituto de Investigaciones Neurológicas Dr. Raúl Carrea (FLENI)
[9] University of Milan,undefined
[10] Centro Dino Ferrari,undefined
[11] Fondazione Ca’ Granda,undefined
[12] IRCCS Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico,undefined
[13] Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET),undefined
[14] Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre,undefined
来源
Acta Neuropathologica | 2015年 / 129卷
关键词
ALS; FTLD; G; C; -repeat; Methylation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The most common cause of both amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is a G4C2-repeat expansion in C9orf72. However, the lower limit for pathological repeats has not been established and expansions with different sizes could have different pathological consequences. One of the implicated disease mechanisms is haploinsufficiency. Previously, we identified expansion-specific hypermethylation at the 5′ CpG-island near the G4C2-repeat, but only in a fraction of carriers (up to 36 %). Here, we tested the hypothesis that the G4C2-repeat itself could be the main site of methylation. To evaluate (G4C2)n-methylation, we developed a novel assay, which was validated by an independent methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme assay. Notably, both assays are qualitative but not quantitative. Blood DNA was available for 270 unrelated individuals, including 71 expansion carriers. In addition, we investigated blood DNA from family members of 16 probands, and 38 DNA samples from multiple tissues of 10 expansion carriers. Finally, we tested DNA from different tissues of an ALS patient carrying a somatically unstable 90-repeat. We demonstrated that the G4C2-expansion is generally methylated in unrelated carriers of alleles >50 repeats (97 %), while small (<22 repeats) or intermediate (22–90 repeats) alleles were completely unmethylated. The presence of (G4C2)n-methylation does not separate the C9orf72-phenotypes (ALS vs. ALS/FTLD vs. FTLD), but has the potential to predict large vs. intermediate repeat length. Our results suggest that (G4C2)n-methylation might sometimes spread to the 5′-upstream region, but not vice versa. It is stable over time, since (G4C2)n-methylation was detected in carriers with a wide range of ages (24–74 years). It was identified in both blood and brain tissues for the same individual, implying its potential use as a biomarker. Furthermore, our findings may open up new perspectives for studying disease mechanisms, such as determining whether methylated and unmethylated repeats have the same ability to form a G-quadruplex configuration.
引用
收藏
页码:715 / 727
页数:12
相关论文
共 628 条
[1]  
Al-Mahdawi S(2008)The Friedreich ataxia GAA repeat expansion mutation induces comparable epigenetic changes in human and transgenic mouse brain and heart tissues Hum Mol Genet 17 735-746
[2]  
Pinto RM(2013)Unconventional translation of C9ORF72 GGGGCC expansion generates insoluble polypeptides specific to c9FTD/ALS Neuron 77 639-646
[3]  
Ismail O(1991)Physical mapping across the fragile X: hypermethylation and clinical expression of the fragile X syndrome Cell 64 861-866
[4]  
Varshney D(2014)Characterization of DNA hypermethylation in the cerebellum of c9FTD/ALS patients Brain Res 1584 15-21
[5]  
Lymperi S(2000)El Escorial revisited: revised criteria for the diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis Amyotroph Lateral Scler Other Motor Neuron Disord 1 293-299
[6]  
Sandi C(2013)Loss of function of C9orf72 causes motor deficits in a zebrafish model of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Ann Neurol 74 180-187
[7]  
Trabzuni D(2013)C9ORF72 transcription in a frontotemporal dementia case with two expanded alleles Neurology 81 1719-1721
[8]  
Pook M(2014)Brain distribution of dipeptide repeat proteins in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and motor neurone disease associated with expansions in C9ORF72 Acta Neuropathol Commun 2 70-955
[9]  
Ash PE(2011)DNA secondary structures and epigenetic determinants of cancer genome evolution Nat Struct Mol Biol 18 950-256
[10]  
Bieniek KF(2011)Expanded GGGGCC hexanucleotide repeat in noncoding region of C9ORF72 causes chromosome 9p-linked FTD and ALS Neuron 72 245-428