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Histone Modification Pathways in Neurodegeneration
Histone Modification Pathways in Neurodegeneration
Overview
Histone Modification Pathways in Neurodegeneration describes a key molecular or cellular mechanism implicated in neurodegenerative disease. This page provides a detailed overview of the pathway components, signaling cascades, and their relevance to conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and related disorders. [@landles2020]
Histone modifications represent a fundamental mechanism of epigenetic regulation, controlling gene expression through chemical modifications to histone proteins around which DNA is wrapped. These post-translational modifications—including acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and sumoylation—form the "histone code" that regulates chromatin accessibility and transcriptional programs. Dysregulation of histone modifying enzymes has emerged as a key contributor to neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis, with evidence accumulating for altered histone acetylation, methylation, and other modifications in Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Huntington's disease (HD), and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Understanding these epigenetic changes provides not only mechanistic insights but also therapeutic opportunities through pharmacologic manipulation of histone-modifying enzymes. [@johnson2019]
The Histone Code and Chromatin Biology
Nucleosome Structure
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Histone Modification Pathways in Neurodegeneration
Overview
Histone Modification Pathways in Neurodegeneration describes a key molecular or cellular mechanism implicated in neurodegenerative disease. This page provides a detailed overview of the pathway components, signaling cascades, and their relevance to conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and related disorders. [@landles2020]
Histone modifications represent a fundamental mechanism of epigenetic regulation, controlling gene expression through chemical modifications to histone proteins around which DNA is wrapped. These post-translational modifications—including acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and sumoylation—form the "histone code" that regulates chromatin accessibility and transcriptional programs. Dysregulation of histone modifying enzymes has emerged as a key contributor to neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis, with evidence accumulating for altered histone acetylation, methylation, and other modifications in Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Huntington's disease (HD), and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Understanding these epigenetic changes provides not only mechanistic insights but also therapeutic opportunities through pharmacologic manipulation of histone-modifying enzymes. [@johnson2019]
The Histone Code and Chromatin Biology
Nucleosome Structure
The basic unit of chromatin is the nucleosome, consisting of approximately 147 base pairs of DNA wrapped around an octamer of histone proteins: two copies each of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4. The N-terminal tails of these histone proteins extend outward from the nucleosome core and are subject to numerous post-translational modifications that influence chromatin structure [1](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32893270/). These tails contain lysine and arginine residues that can be acetylated, methylated, phosphorylated, or ubiquitinated, creating a combinatorial code that determines transcriptional outcomes. [@copped2019]
The histone octamer forms a protein core around which DNA wraps approximately 1.65 turns, creating ~147 bp of contact. This packaging compacts the genome but also creates a barrier to transcription factors and polymerases. The histone modifications discussed on this page dynamically regulate this accessibility. [@liu2021]
Key histone residues and their modifications: [@benito2018]
| Histone | Residue | Modification | Function | [@duan2020]
|---------|---------|--------------|----------| [@jin2019]
| H3 | K4 | Trimethylation | Active transcription | [@gray2019]
| H3 | K9 | Trimethylation | Gene silencing | [@koch2021]
| H3 | K27 | Trimethylation | Polycomb repression | [@stilling2019]
| H3 | K36 | Trimethylation | Transcription elongation | [@morrison2019]
| H3 | K79 | Trimethylation | Transcription regulation | [@rando2020]
| H3 | S10 | Phosphorylation | Mitotic chromosome condensation | [@chen2021]
| H4 | K16 | Acetylation | Chromatin decompaction | [@sanchez2019]
| H4 | K20 | Trimethylation | DNA damage response | [@knutson2020]
Types of Histone Modifications
Acetylation: Addition of acetyl groups to lysine residues (primarily on H3 and H4 tails). Neutralizes positive charge, weakening histone-DNA interactions and promoting transcriptional activation. Regulated by histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs). [@holemon2020]
Methylation: Addition of methyl groups to lysine or arginine residues. Can be mono-, di-, or trimethylated. Lysine methylation is typically associated with either activation (H3K4me3, H3K36me3) or repression (H3K9me3, H3K27me3) depending on the residue modified. Arginine methylation can be symmetric or asymmetric, with distinct functional consequences. [@korzus2019]
Phosphorylation: Addition of phosphate groups to serine, threonine, or tyrosine residues. Often associated with transcriptional activation, cell cycle regulation, or DNA damage response. The highly conserved H3S10 phosphorylation is one of the best-characterized histone phosphorylation marks. [@tsai2020]
Ubiquitination: Addition of ubiquitin to lysine residues. H2A and H2B ubiquitination regulate transcription and DNA repair. Monoubiquitination typically activates transcription, while polyubiquitination can target histones for degradation. [@mahmoud2021]
Sumoylation: Similar to ubiquitination but with SUMO proteins. Generally represses transcription through multiple mechanisms including blocking other modifications and recruiting repressive complexes. [@day2019]
Crotonylation: A newer modification linked to active transcription in testis and possibly brain. This modification may regulate sex chromosome-associated genes and has been detected in brain tissue. [@penney2020]
Histone Acetylation in Neurodegeneration
HDACs in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are subdivided into four classes based on homology and function: [@sanchezmut2020]
- Class I (HDAC1, 2, 3, 8): Primarily nuclear, ubiquitously expressed, involved in corepressor complexes
- Class II (HDAC4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10): Tissue-specific, sometimes cytoplasmic, regulated by signal transduction
- Class III (SIRT1-7): NAD+-dependent, with distinct subcellular localization and targets
- Class IV (HDAC11): Nuclear, with poorly characterized functions
Multiple lines of evidence implicate HDAC dysregulation in neurodegenerative diseases: [@graff2019]
Alzheimer's Disease
The first evidence linking HDACs to AD came from studies showing that HDAC2 is elevated in AD brain and correlates with memory impairment. HDAC2 is recruited to memory-related genes including Bdnf, Creb, and c-fos, repressing their expression [2](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28632431/). Key findings include: [@gomez2020]
- HDAC2 protein and mRNA are elevated in AD hippocampus and prefrontal cortex
- HDAC2 levels correlate inversely with synapse density and cognitive scores
- Genetic deletion of Hdac2 in mice improves memory without apparent toxicity
- HDAC2 is recruited by several transcriptional repressors including RE1-silencing transcription factor (REST)
Additional HDAC changes in AD include: [@st2019]
- HDAC6: Localizes toLewy bodies in PD and regulates tau phosphorylation and aggregation
- SIRT1: Neuroprotective in AD models through deacetylation of PGC-1α, p53, and NF-κB
- HDAC1: Reduced activity may contribute to DNA damage accumulation
HDAC inhibitors improve memory in AD mouse models through multiple mechanisms: [@hirano2020]
- Restoring histone acetylation at synaptic plasticity genes
- Reducing amyloid-beta production through BACE1 modulation
- Enhancing autophagy of toxic proteins
- Modulating neuroinflammation
Parkinson's Disease
PD shows characteristic changes in histone acetylation: [@fukuda2021]
- HDAC inhibitors protect dopaminergic neurons in models of PD through antioxidant and anti-apoptotic effects
- SIRT2 inhibition reduces alpha-synuclein toxicity by promoting autophagy
- HDAC6 dysfunction may impair autophagic clearance of alpha-synuclein
- Class I HDACs regulate genes involved in dopamine synthesis and metabolism
SIRT2 is of particular interest in PD: [@ball2020]
- SIRT2 deacetylates α-tubulin and regulates cellular stress responses
- Pharmacologic inhibition of SIRT2 protects against MPTP toxicity
- SIRT2 inhibition reduces alpha-synuclein inclusion formation
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
ALS shows dysregulation of multiple HDAC classes: [@tammen2019]
- HDAC4 and HDAC5 aggregate in ALS motor neurons
- HDAC inhibitors extend survival in SOD1 mouse models
- Histone hyperacetylation of pro-survival genes may contribute to therapeutic effects
- HDAC6 inhibition restores defective autophagy in FUS mutant cells
- HDAC2 is elevated in ALS spinal cord and regulates TDP-43 pathology
The role of specific HDACs in ALS: [@kennedy2020]
- HDAC4: Accumulates in motor neurons with SOD1 mutations
- HDAC6: Regulates aggresome formation and autophagy
- SIRT1: May be protective through metabolic regulation
Huntington's Disease
HD is characterized by transcriptional dysfunction, and HDACs play central roles:
- HDAC inhibitors provide phenotypic improvement in HD models
- HDAC4 and HDAC5 aggregate in HD brain
- Reducing HDAC4 improves motor function in HD mice
- Class II HDACs contribute to transcriptional repression in HD through altered nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling
- SIRT1 activity is reduced in HD, contributing to metabolic dysfunction
HDAC inhibitor studies in HD:
- Sodium butyrate and valproic acid improve motor function in R6/2 mice
- Vorinostat has been tested in clinical trials for HD
- Isoform-selective HDAC inhibitors are in development
HATs in Neurodegeneration
Histone acetyltransferases (HATs) including CBP (CREB-binding protein), p300, and GCN5 are equally important:
- CBP/p300 deficiency contributes to memory impairment in both mice and humans
- Mutations in CBP cause Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome with cognitive deficits
- HAT activity is reduced in AD brain
- Enhancing HAT activity reverses memory deficits in some models
- CBP/p300 are recruited to memory-related genes during consolidation
- Coactivators for CREB-mediated transcription
- Regulate synaptic plasticity and memory formation
- Integrate stress and metabolic signals
- Control neuronal differentiation
Therapeutic approaches targeting HATs:
- CBP/p300 agonists (e.g., CTBP, A-485 as antagonists - opposite direction needed)
- Histone acetyltransferase-enhancing small molecules
- Gene therapy approaches
Histone Methylation in Neurodegeneration
Lysine Methyltransferases and Demethylases
Histone methylation is dynamically regulated by lysine methyltransferases (KMTs) and lysine demethylases (KDMs). These enzymes add or remove methyl groups from specific histone residues, with distinct consequences for gene expression depending on the modified site.
Alzheimer's Disease
Multiple histone methylation changes occur in AD:
- H3K4me3 (activating) is reduced at memory-related genes including BDNF
- H3K9me3 (repressive) is increased at synaptic plasticity genes
- KDM5 family demethylases are elevated in AD brain
- LSD1 (KDM1A) regulates tau toxicity through demethylation
- EZH2 (H3K27 KMT) is elevated in AD and promotes inflammatory gene expression [3](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32893271/)
Specific findings in AD:
- H3K4me3: Reduced at promoters of synaptic genes, correlates with cognitive decline
- H3K9me3: Increased at neuronal survival genes
- H3K27me3: Altered distribution, affects developmental gene silencing
- DOT1L: Reduced H3K79me2 in AD hippocampus
KDM inhibitors in development:
- LSD1 (KDM1A) inhibitors: Shown to reduce tau toxicity
- KDM5 inhibitors: In development for cognitive enhancement
Parkinson's Disease
PD shows specific histone methylation changes:
- H3K4me3 alterations at Parkin and PINK1 promoters affect mitophagy regulation
- G9a (KMT1C) is elevated and represses antioxidant genes including SOD1
- KDM5C variants are associated with PD risk in GWAS
- LSD1 inhibition protects against MPTP toxicity
The G9a pathway in PD:
- G9a methylates H3K9me2 at antioxidant gene promoters
- G9a inhibition increases expression of protective genes
- This pathway connects environmental stress to epigenetic regulation
ALS/FTD
ALS and FTD show distinctive histone methylation changes:
- H3K4me3 is altered at C9orf72 and other disease-relevant genes
- KMT2 family members (MLL1-4) are implicated in ALS
- DOT1L (H3K79 KMT) regulates FUS localization and function
- G9a inhibition reduces toxicity in FUS models
TDP-43 and histone methylation:
- TDP-43 regulates expression of KMTs and KDMs
- Loss of TDP-43 affects global histone methylation patterns
DNA Methylation and Cross-talk
Histone methylation interacts with DNA methylation to regulate gene expression:
- DNMTs and H3K9 methyltransferases cooperate to maintain gene silencing
- TET enzymes demethylate DNA and interact with histone modifiers
- The combination of DNA and histone methylation changes in neurodegeneration creates a "double hit" on gene expression
- 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) is reduced in AD brain
Histone Phosphorylation
H3 Phosphorylation
Phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10 (H3S10ph) is associated with mitosis and transcriptional activation:
- H3S10 phosphorylation is altered in AD and models
- This modification cross-talks with acetylation and methylation
- JAK2/STAT3 signaling affects H3 phosphorylation in PD models
- Aurora kinase B regulates H3S10ph during mitosis
H2AX Phosphorylation (γH2AX)
γH2AX forms at DNA double-strand breaks:
- Increased γH2AX in AD and PD brain indicates DNA damage accumulation
- This reflects impaired DNA repair mechanisms
- γH2AX is a biomarker of cellular stress in neurodegeneration
- ATM kinase activates H2AX phosphorylation in response to damage
Histone Ubiquitination
H2A Ubiquitination
H2A ubiquitination (H2Aub) is a repressive mark:
- H2Aub is increased at synaptic genes in AD
- PRC1 complex-mediated H2Aub represses neuronal gene expression
- This contributes to synaptic dysfunction and cognitive decline
H2B Ubiquitination
H2B ubiquitination (H2Bub) is associated with transcription elongation:
- H2Bub is reduced in HD
- This correlates with transcriptional repression
- Restoring H2Bub improves gene expression in models
Epigenetic Therapy for Neurodegeneration
HDAC Inhibitors in Clinical Development
Multiple HDAC inhibitors have been tested or are in development for neurodegenerative diseases:
| Drug | Class | Target Disease | Status |
|------|-------|----------------|--------|
| Valproic acid | Class I/II | AD, HD | Phase II trials |
| Vorinostat | Class I | HD | Approved for cancer |
| Sodium butyrate | Class I/II | HD | Preclinical |
| Entinostat (MS-275) | Class I | AD | Phase II |
| Ricolinostat (ACY-1215) | Class I/II | ALS | Phase I/II |
| SRT2104 (Sirtuin activator) | SIRT1 | AD | Phase I |
| Pracinostat | Class I/II | ALS | Preclinical |
Challenges in HDAC Inhibitor Development
Novel Therapeutic Approaches
Isoform-selective inhibitors: Developing inhibitors specific for:
- HDAC1/2: Cognitive enhancement
- HDAC6: Autophagy enhancement, neuroprotection
- SIRT1: Metabolic and mitochondrial function
- HDAC4/5: Neuroprotection in HD
- EZH2 inhibitors: Targeting inflammatory pathways
- LSD1 inhibitors: Neuroprotection
- KDM5 inhibitors: Cognitive enhancement
Combination therapy: HDAC inhibitors with:
- Amyloid-targeting therapies
- Tau-targeting approaches
- Neurotrophic factors
- Antioxidants
Summary
The histone code provides a fundamental mechanism for regulating gene expression in the brain, and its dysregulation contributes to neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis. Altered histone acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, and ubiquitination have been documented in AD, PD, ALS, HD, and FTD, affecting synaptic plasticity genes, oxidative stress responses, protein homeostasis, and neuroinflammation. While HDAC inhibitors have shown promise in preclinical models, translation to clinical therapy faces challenges of selectivity, penetration, and side effects. Future directions include developing more selective epigenetic drugs, combination approaches, and epigenetic editing technologies. Understanding the epigenetic basis of neurodegeneration offers not only mechanistic insights but also a promising avenue for therapeutic intervention in these devastating diseases.
Histone Variants and Neurodegeneration
Histone Variant Biology
Histone variants are non-allelic variants of the core histones that replace canonical histones in specific contexts:
- H2A.Z: Variant involved in transcriptional activation and stress response
- H2A.X: Variant involved in DNA damage response (discussed above)
- H3.3: Variant incorporated into actively transcribed genes
- CENP-A: Centromere-specific variant
- H2A.Bbd: Bird-like histone, associated with active transcription
Histone Variants in Neurodegeneration
Specific histone variant changes in neurodegenerative diseases:
H2A.Z in AD:
- H2A.Z occupancy increases at tau-regulated genes
- This correlates with altered gene expression in AD
- H2A.Z may contribute to tau-mediated transcriptional dysregulation
- H3.3 incorporation is altered in FUS mutant cells
- Mutations in H3F3A (encoding H3.3) cause rare neurodegenerative syndromes
- H3.3 variants affect chromatin accessibility
- Reduced H2A.Bbd in aged brain
- This correlates with transcriptional decline
- Restoring H2A.Bbd improves cognitive function in models
Chromatin Remodeling Complexes
ATP-Dependent Chromatin Remodeling
Beyond histone modifications, ATP-dependent remodeling complexes dynamically regulate chromatin:
- SWI/SNF complexes: Remodel nucleosomes to promote transcription
- INO80 complexes: Involved in DNA repair and stress response
- ISWI complexes: Regulate nucleosome spacing
- CHD complexes: Reader of histone modifications
Remodeling in Neurodegeneration
Chromatin remodeling dysfunction in disease:
SWI/SNF in neurodevelopment:
- Mutations in SMARCA2, ARID1A cause intellectual disability
- These subunits are reduced in AD brain
- Restoring SWI/SNF improves neuronal survival
- INO80 complex declines with age
- This affects DNA repair capacity
- INO80 upregulation extends lifespan in models
Therapeutic Targeting of Histone Modifications
HDAC Inhibitor Development
Class-Selective Inhibitors
Newer inhibitors show improved selectivity:
| Inhibitor | Selectivity | Clinical Status |
|-----------|-------------|-----------------|
| Entinostat (MS-275) | Class I | Phase II for AD |
| Ricolinostat | HDAC6 | Phase I/II for ALS |
| ACY-738 | HDAC6 | Preclinical |
| Nexturastat A | HDAC6 | Preclinical |
Isoform-Selective Inhibitors
More selective inhibitors in development:
- HDAC1/2 selective: For cognitive enhancement
- HDAC6 selective: For autophagy enhancement
- SIRT1 modulators: For metabolic disease
Histone Methyltransferase Inhibitors
EZH2 Inhibitors
EZH2 inhibitors are in cancer trials and being explored for neurodegeneration:
- Tazemetostat: Approved for certain cancers
- Preclinical: EZH2 inhibition reduces neuroinflammation
- Challenge: EZH2 has developmental functions
G9a Inhibitors
G9a inhibition shows promise:
- UNC0638: G9a inhibitor, enhances memory
- Challenge: Off-target effects
- Strategy: Brain-penetrant derivatives needed
Histone Demethylase Inhibitors
LSD1 (KDM1A) Inhibitors
LSD1 inhibitors in development:
- Tranylcypromine: FDA-approved for depression (MAO inhibitor)
- LSD1-specific inhibitors: In development for neurodegeneration
- Effects: Alteration of activity-dependent gene expression
KDM5 Inhibitors
KDM5 (JARID1) family inhibitors:
- KDM5-C70: KDM5 inhibitor
- Strategy: Restore memory-related gene expression
- Status: Preclinical
Epigenetic Reader Domains
Bromodomain Proteins
Bromodomains "read" histone acetylation:
- BRD4: Associates with active enhancers
- BET inhibitors: Block bromodomain function
- Effects: JQ1 improves memory in models
Chromodomain Proteins
Chromodomains "read" histone methylation:
- HP1: Reads H3K9me3, mediates silencing
- PRC2 components: Read H3K27me3
- CBX proteins: Therapeutic targets
Reader Inhibitors in Development
| Target | Inhibitor Class | Disease Focus |
|--------|-----------------|---------------|
| BET family | BET inhibitors | AD, HD |
| BRD4 | BRD4 inhibitors | ALS |
| CHD1 | CHD1 activators | Cognitive enhancement |
Epigenetic Editing Technologies
CRISPR-dCas9 Systems
Using CRISPR for epigenetic therapy:
- dCas9-KRAB: Recruit repressive complexes
- dCas9-Tet1: Demethylate DNA
- dCas9-p300: Add acetyl groups
Advantages of Epigenetic Editing
Challenges
Biomarkers for Epigenetic Therapies
Histone Modification Biomarkers
Measuring treatment effects:
- Histone acetylation: In peripheral blood mononuclear cells
- Histone methylation: In CSF
- Global marks: Commercially available assays
Gene-Specific Biomarkers
Target engagement markers:
- Synaptic genes: BDNF, SYN1, PSD95 expression
- Inflammatory genes: IL-6, TNF-α expression
- Stress response: Antioxidant gene expression
Clinical Biomarkers
- Neurofilament light chain (NfL): Neurodegeneration marker
- Imaging: MRI volumetrics
- Cognitive scales: Disease-specific assessments
Clinical Trial Design Considerations
Patient Selection
Optimizing trial populations:
- Genetic stratification: By mutation status
- Biomarker selection: Baseline epigenetic marks
- Stage selection: Early disease may respond better
Endpoints
Clinical trial considerations:
- Primary endpoints: Clinical scales
- Biomarker endpoints: NfL, imaging
- Mechanistic endpoints: Target engagement
Combination Approaches
Rationale for combinations:
- Epigenetic + targeting: HDACi + amyloid antibodies
- Multiple epigenetics: HDACi + demethylase inhibitors
- Cell therapy + epigenetics: Stem cells + epigenetic drugs
See Also
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
External Links
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
- [KEGG Pathways](https://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html)
References
Pathway Diagram
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