Abstract

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder next to Alzheimer’s disease. Most PD cases are considered to be sporadic and despite considerable scientific effort, the underlying cause(s) still remain(s) enigmatic. In particular, it is unknown to which extent epigenetic alterations contribute to the pathophysiology of this devastating disorder. This is partly due to the fact that appropriate PD models are not yet available. Moreover, epigenetic patterns and mechanisms are species specific and murine systems reflect only a few of the idiosyncrasies of human neurons. For several years now, patient-specific stem cell-derived neural and non-neural cells have been employed to overcome this limitation allowing the analysis and establishment of humanized disease models for PD. Thus, several studies tried to dissect epigenetic alterations such as aberrant DNA methylation or microRNA patterns using lund human mesencephalic cell lines or neurons derived from (patient-specific) induced pluripotent stem cells. These studies demonstrate that human neurons have the potential to be used as model systems for the study of epigenetic modifications in PD such as characterizing epigenetic changes, correlating epigenetic changes to gene expression alterations and hopefully using these insights for the development of novel therapeutics. However, more research is required to define the epigenetic (age-associated) landscape of human in vitro neurons and compare these to native neurons before they can be established as suitable models for epigenetic studies in PD. In this review, we summarize the knowledge about epigenetic studies performed on human neuronal PD models, and we discuss advantages and current limitations of these (stem cell-derived) neuronal models for the study of epigenetic alterations in PD.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder affecting 1–2% of the population aged >65 years (Tanner and Goldman, 1996)

  • PD pointing to different clinic phenotypes which may correspond to different gene-environment interactions and individual susceptibility (Erro et al, 2013)

  • The effect of NCGC00188758 was confirmed in iPSC-derived DAn of SNCA triplication, SNCA A53T, sPD and PARK9 patients (Mazzulli et al, 2016). These aforementioned studies bear only little impact regarding the pathophysiological processes of sPD. It remains to be determined whether human neurons might be used to generate useful models to identify novel pathophysiological processes to such as epigenetic modifications in PD

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder affecting 1–2% of the population aged >65 years (Tanner and Goldman, 1996). Whole-genome DNA methylation analysis of prefrontal cortical tissue of humans and chimpanzees revealed extensive speciesspecific variation associated with strong gene expression changes (Zeng et al, 2012) It has already been demonstrated on a single-cell level that mouse and human embryos are characterized by distinct differences in DNA methylation and histone modification patterns (Chavez et al, 2014). IPSC can be derived from patients and controls allowing the study of disease- and non-affected defined neuronal populations and other cellular subtypes Tissue specific cells such as dermal (Joannides et al, 2004) or mesenchymal stem cells (Singh et al, 2017) can be differentiated into neural cells. These aforementioned studies bear only little impact regarding the pathophysiological processes of sPD It remains to be determined whether human (patient-specific) neurons might be used to generate useful models to identify novel pathophysiological processes to such as epigenetic modifications in PD. The differentiation into DAn was accompanied by distinct changes in gene expression. 57,905 genes were mapped in total and 6,147 genes were significantly

Results
PD triplication patient
Findings
CONCLUSION
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