| Literature DB >> 32457596 |
Monica A Wagner1, Kirk I Erickson2,3, Catherine M Bender1, Yvette P Conley1,4.
Abstract
The risk of breast cancer increases with age, with the majority of women diagnosed with breast cancer being postmenopausal. It has been estimated that 25-75% of women with breast cancer experience changes in cognitive function (CF) related to disease and treatment, which compromises psychological well-being, decision making, ability to perform daily activities, and adherence to cancer therapy. Unfortunately, the mechanisms that underlie neurocognitive changes in women with breast cancer remain poorly understood, which in turn limits the development of effective treatments and prevention strategies. Exercise has great potential as a non-pharmaceutical intervention to mitigate the decline in CF in women with breast cancer. Evidence suggests that DNA methylation, an epigenetic mechanism for gene regulation, impacts CF and brain health (BH), that exercise influences DNA methylation, and that exercise impacts CF and BH. Although investigating DNA methylation has the potential to uncover the biologic foundations for understanding neurocognitive changes within the context of breast cancer and its treatment as well as the ability to understand how exercise mitigates these changes, there is a dearth of research on this topic. The purpose of this review article is to compile the research in these areas and to recommend potential areas of opportunity for investigation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; brain health; breast cancer; cognitive function; epigenomics; physical activity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457596 PMCID: PMC7225270 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2020.00123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Exemplar hallmarks of molecular aging.
| Hallmark | Description |
|---|---|
| Attrition of telomeres | Most mammalian somatic cells do not express telomerase, an enzyme that is responsible for replicating the terminal ends of linear DNA molecules. Therefore, the DNA sequences at the end of the chromosome progressively lose their telomere protection with each new cell division (López-Otín et al., |
| A decline in mitochondrial function and cellular energies | Declines in mitochondrial function and mutations in mitochondrial DNA appear to affect cellular energetics. Elevated levels of ROS resulting from mitochondrial dysfunction may decrease apoptosis and lead to resistance of chemotherapeutic agents thereby promoting breast cancer malignancy (López-Otín et al., |
| Genome Instability | Over time DNA damage accumulates in normal cells as the result of endogenous cellular activity such as DNA replication errors or DNA damage due to ROS (López-Otín et al., |
| Epigenetic Alterations | Epigenetic changes are alterations in gene expression that do affect the DNA sequence. These changes involve processes such as posttranslational histone modifications, DNA methylation patterns, and chromatin remodeling. Aging cells experience random DNA methylation drift creating mosaic aging stem cells that could lead to cancer (López-Otín et al., |
| DNA damage that affects cellular senescence | Cellular senescence is by which a cell ceases to divide. The primary objective of senescence is to inhibit the proliferation of impaired cells and to mark the cells for destruction by the immune system. The process is associated with aging and age-related conditions. In older individuals, the widespread damage and poor clearance of senescence results in cell accumulation, which contributes to aging (López-Otín et al., |
| Altered intracellular communication | As part of aging, inflammatory reactions increase leading to alterations in neurohormonal signaling. There is also a decrease in immunosurveillance against premalignant cells and pathogens and a change in the structure of both the extracellular and pericellular environments (López-Otín et al., |
Figure 1Effects of breast cancer and breast cancer treatment on brain aging.
Figure 2Influences of cognitive and brain reserve on brain aging.
Publications highlighting epigenomics, cognitive function, and exercise.
| Name | Population | Phenotypic focus | Study description | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bradburn et al. ( | Physically and mentally healthy adults, young and old, from the MyoAge cohort ( | Cognition | Investigated a panel of 35 cytokines in participants to identify age-related immune markers associated with specific cognition measures. | In blood samples, there is age-related hypomethylation at specific CpG sites in the promoter region of the |
| Gale et al. ( | Members of the Lothian Birth Cohort all aged 79 ( | Cognition and exercise | Investigated the cross-sectional relationship between biological age (using DNA methylation for extrinsic and intrinsic epigenetic age acceleration) and sedentary and walking behavior in older adults. | No convincing evidence that biological age is associated with sedentary or walking behavior. |
| Liu et al. ( | African Americans from the Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy (GENOA) study ( | Cognition | Investigated the association between peripheral blood leukocyte methylation levels in the | Methylation levels at many of the CpGs in the APOE genomic region have an inverse association with delayed recall during the normal cognitive aging process. |
| Marioni et al. ( | Members of the Lothian Birth Cohort of 1936 [at ages 70 ( | Cognition and exercise | Examined the association between the epigenetic clock and lung function, walking speed, grip strength, and cognitive ability | Cross-sectional correlations were significant between age acceleration and cognition as well as lung function and grip strength. |
| Yao et al. ( | Breast cancer patients and healthy non-cancer controls from the National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program ( | Cognition | Characterization of changes in leukocyte DA methylome and examination of significant methylation changes with perceived cognitive impairments. | Chemotherapy alters the DNA methylation pattern in leukocytes of breast cancer patients and the CpG cg16936953 in the |
| McCullough et al. ( | Women with breast cancer that were part of the Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project (total | Exercise | Examined modification of recreational physical activity-mortality association by gene-specific promoter methylation and global methylation. | Promotor methylation of |
| McEwen et al. ( | Community-dwelling older women aged 55–70 from Vancouver, Canada ( | Exercise | Investigated epigenetic modifications after 6-month self-management intervention with group education, individual personal training sessions, and use of an activity monitor (Fitbit). | No significant association between DNA methylation and physical activity but did find epigenetic changes in weight-associated genes |
Figure 3Gap in knowledge.