Articulo
Epigenetic editing of the Dlg4/PSD95 gene improves cognition in aged and Alzheimer's disease mice
Fecha
2017Registro en:
1151029
WOS:000417337600025
Institución
Resumen
Expression of Dlg4, which encodes the postsynaptic receptor clustering protein PSD95, is decreased in ageing and Alzheimer's disease. Bustos et al. engineer a zinc finger protein that modifies Dlg4 expression by changing its epigenetic state, and use the construct to rescue memory deficits in aged and Alzheimer's disease mice.The Dlg4 gene encodes for post-synaptic density protein 95 (PSD95), a major synaptic protein that clusters glutamate receptors and is critical for plasticity. PSD95 levels are diminished in ageing and neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease and Huntington's disease. The epigenetic mechanisms that (dys)regulate transcription of Dlg4/PSD95, or other plasticity genes, are largely unknown, limiting the development of targeted epigenome therapy. We analysed the Dlg4/PSD95 epigenetic landscape in hippocampal tissue and designed a Dlg4/PSD95 gene-targeting strategy: a Dlg4/PSD95 zinc finger DNA-binding domain was engineered and fused to effector domains to either repress (G9a, Suvdel76, SKD) or activate (VP64) transcription, generating artificial transcription factors or epigenetic editors (methylating H3K9). These epi-editors altered critical histone marks and subsequently Dlg4/PSD95 expression, which, importantly, impacted several hippocampal neuron plasticity processes. Intriguingly, transduction of the artificial transcription factor PSD95-VP64 rescued memory deficits in aged and Alzheimer's disease mice. Conclusively, this work validates PSD95 as a key player in memory and establishes epigenetic editing as a potential therapy to treat human neurological disorders.