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DNA Methylation Analysis of Candidate Genes Associated with Dementia in Peripheral Blood

Peter Fransquet, Paul Lacaze, Richard Saffery, James Phung, Emily Parker, Raj C. Shah, Anne M. Murray, Robyn L. Woods, Joanne Ryan

2020Epigenomics30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aim: To investigate whether genes implicated in dementia pathogenesis are differently methylated in peripheral blood. Materials & methods: Participants included 160 cognitively healthy individuals aged 70+ years: 73 who were subsequently diagnosed with dementia and 87 controls matched on age, gender, education, smoking and baseline cognition. A total of 49 participants also provided blood samples at diagnosis. Blood DNA methylation of APOE, APP, BDNF, PIN1, SNCA and TOMM40 was examined. Results: A total of 56 of 299 probes were differentially methylated in dementia compared with controls and 39 probes prior to diagnosis. The greatest effect size was in APP (cg19423170, Δ-8.32%, adjusted p = 0.009 at diagnosis; cg19933173, Δ-4.18%, adjusted p < 0.0001 prediagnosis). Conclusion: Genes implicated in dementia pathogenesis show differential blood methylation in dementia, even prior to diagnosis.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyDNA methylationGenePeripheral bloodGeneticsDementiaMethylationCandidate geneComputational biologyBioinformaticsGene expressionImmunologyDiseaseInternal medicineMedicineEpigenetics and DNA MethylationDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchDiet and metabolism studies
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