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Browsing by Author "Li, Ziyi"
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Item 5-hydroxymethylcytosine is dynamically regulated during forebrain organoid development and aberrantly altered in Alzheimer’s disease(Cell Press, 2021-04-27) Kuehner, Janise N.; Chen, Junyu; Bruggeman, Emily C.; Wang, Feng; Li, Yangping; Xu, Chongchong; McEachin, Zachary T.; Li, Ziyi; Chen, Li; Hales, Chadwick M.; Wen, Zhexing; Yang, Jingjing; Yao, Bing; Medicine, School of Medicine5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) undergoes dynamic changes during mammalian brain development, and its dysregulation is associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD). The dynamics of 5hmC during early human brain development and how they contribute to AD pathologies remain largely unexplored. We generate 5hmC and transcriptome profiles encompassing several developmental time points of healthy forebrain organoids and organoids derived from several familial AD patients. Stage-specific differentially hydroxymethylated regions demonstrate an acquisition or depletion of 5hmC modifications across developmental stages. Additionally, genes concomitantly increasing or decreasing in 5hmC and gene expression are enriched in neurobiological or early developmental processes, respectively. Importantly, our AD organoids corroborate cellular and molecular phenotypes previously observed in human AD brains. 5hmC is significantly altered in developmentally programmed 5hmC intragenic regions in defined fetal histone marks and enhancers in AD organoids. These data suggest a highly coordinated molecular system that may be dysregulated in these early developing AD organoids.Item Ethnicity-specific and overlapping alterations of brain hydroxymethylome in Alzheimer’s disease(Oxford University Press, 2020-01) Qin, Lixia; Xu, Qian; Li, Ziyi; Chen, Li; Li, Yujing; Yang, Nannan; Liu, Zhenhua; Guo, Jifeng; Shen, Lu; Allen, Emily G.; Chen, Chao; Ma, Chao; Wu, Hao; Zhu, Xiongwei; Jin, Peng; Tang, Beisha; Medicine, School of Medicine5-Methylcytosine (5mC), generated through the covalent addition of a methyl group to the fifth carbon of cytosine, is the most prevalent DNA modification in humans and functions as a critical player in the regulation of tissue and cell-specific gene expression. 5mC can be oxidized to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) by ten–eleven translocation (TET) enzymes, which is enriched in brain. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder, and several studies using the samples collected from Caucasian cohorts have found that epigenetics, particularly cytosine methylation, could play a role in the etiological process of AD. However, little research has been conducted using the samples of other ethnic groups. Here we generated genome-wide profiles of both 5mC and 5hmC in human frontal cortex tissues from late-onset Chinese AD patients and cognitively normal controls. We identified both Chinese-specific and overlapping differentially hydroxymethylated regions (DhMRs) with Caucasian cohorts. Pathway analyses revealed specific pathways enriched among Chinese-specific DhMRs, as well as the shared DhMRs with Caucasian cohorts. Furthermore, two important transcription factor-binding motifs, hypoxia-inducible factor 2α (HIF2α) and hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF1α), were enriched in the DhMRs. Our analyses provide the first genome-wide profiling of DNA hydroxymethylation of the frontal cortex of AD patients from China, emphasizing an important role of 5hmC in AD pathogenesis and highlighting both ethnicity-specific and overlapping changes of brain hydroxymethylome in AD.