| Literature DB >> 26696822 |
Xing-Shu Chen1, Nanxin Huang1, Namaka Michael2, Lan Xiao1.
Abstract
Schizophrenia (SZ) is a chronic and severe mental illness for which currently there is no cure. At present, the exact molecular mechanism involved in the underlying pathogenesis of SZ is unknown. The disease is thought to be caused by a combination of genetic, biological, psychological, and environmental factors. Recent studies have shown that epigenetic regulation is involved in SZ pathology. Specifically, DNA methylation, one of the earliest found epigenetic modifications, has been extensively linked to modulation of neuronal function, leading to psychiatric disorders such as SZ. However, increasing evidence indicates that glial cells, especially dysfunctional oligodendrocytes undergo DNA methylation changes that contribute to the pathogenesis of SZ. This review primarily focuses on DNA methylation involved in glial dysfunctions in SZ. Clarifying this mechanism may lead to the development of new therapeutic interventional strategies for the treatment of SZ and other illnesses by correcting abnormal methylation in glial cells.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; astrocyte; glial genesis; mental illness; oligodendrocyte; schizophrenia
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696822 PMCID: PMC4667081 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2015.00451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Schematic diagram: DNA methylation in gene transcriptional regulation. DNA methylation is mediated by Dnmts, which is recruited by MBDs and form transcription repressor complexes together with co-repressors (co-rep) and HDACs, and induces transcriptional inhibition. Demethylation is mediated by TETs, which can catalyze oxidation of 5mC to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), and finally leads to disassembly of the repressor complexes and gene transcriptional activation. MBDs, methyl-binding domain proteins; Dnmts, DNA methyltransferases; HDACs, histone deacetylase; Co-Rep, co-repressors; TETs, the ten-eleven translocases; Gadd45β, growth arrest and DNA damage 45-beta.
DNA methylated sate and glia related gene expression.
| Gene | Methylated state | Expression | Reference | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MAG | Demethylated | Increase | Grubinska et al. ( | Differentiation of culture OLs |
| MBP | Demethylated | Increase | Wu et al. ( | Dnmt3a−/− NSCs |
| Methylated of arginine | Increase | Nguyen et al. ( | Development | |
| Olig1 | Demethylated | Increase | Wu et al. ( | Dnmt3a−/− NSCs |
| Sox10 | Hypermethylated | Decrease | Iwamoto et al. ( | Schizophrenia |
| Decrease | Nielsen et al. ( | Cocaine exposure | ||
| PAD2/4 | Decreased methylation | Increase | Mastronardi et al. ( | Multiple sclerosis (MS) |
| Id2/4 | Demethylated | Increase | Huang et al. ( | NSCs differentiation |
| Increase | Wu et al. ( | Dnmt3a−/− NSCs | ||
| GFAP | Demethylated | Increase | Takizawa et al. ( | Gliogenesis |
| MeCP2 E1 bind to exon 1 of Gfap | — | Tsujimura et al. ( | NSCs | |
| S100 | Demethylated | Increase | Hatada et al. ( | Gliogenesis |
| EAAT2 | Hypermethylated | Decrease | Zschocke et al. ( | Glioma cell lines |
| tPA | Demethylated | Increase | Zhang et al. ( | Ethanol exposure |
| Kir4.1 | Hypermethylated | Decrease | Nwaobi et al. ( | Ischemic, injury, epilepsy, and Alzheimer |
| MCT4 | Hypermethylated | Decrease | Liu et al. ( | Temporal lobe epilepsy |