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Cross-tissue methylomic profiling strongly implicates a role for cortex-specific deregulation of ANK1 in Alzheimer’s disease neuropathology

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2014

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Lunnon, K., R. Smith, E. Hannon, P. De Jager, G. Srivastava, M. Volta, C. Troakes, et al. 2014. “Cross-tissue methylomic profiling strongly implicates a role for cortex-specific deregulation of ANK1 in Alzheimer’s disease neuropathology.” Nature neuroscience 17 (9): 1164-1170. doi:10.1038/nn.3782. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nn.3782.

Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a chronic neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive neuropathology and cognitive decline. We describe a cross-tissue analysis of methylomic variation in AD using samples from three independent human post-mortem brain cohorts. We identify a differentially methylated region in the ankyrin 1 (ANK1) gene that is associated with neuropathology in the entorhinal cortex, a primary site of AD manifestation. This region was confirmed as significantly hypermethylated in two other cortical regions (superior temporal gyrus and prefrontal cortex) but not in the cerebellum, a region largely protected from neurodegeneration in AD, nor whole blood obtained pre-mortem, from the same individuals. Neuropathology-associated ANK1 hypermethylation was subsequently confirmed in cortical samples from three independent brain cohorts. This study represents the first epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of AD employing a sequential replication design across multiple tissues, and highlights the power of this approach for identifying methylomic variation associated with complex disease.

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