Novel method of isolating nuclei of human oligodendrocyte precursor cells reveals substantial developmental changes in gene expression and H3K27ac histone modification

Author:

Kozlenkov Alexey12ORCID,Vadukapuram Ramu12,Zhou Ping12,Fam Peter1,Wegner Michael3ORCID,Dracheva Stella12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research & Development James J. Peters VA Medical Center Bronx New York USA

2. Friedman Brain Institute and Department of Psychiatry Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York New York USA

3. Institut für Biochemie, Emil‐Fischer‐Zentrum Friedrich‐Alexander Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg Erlangen Germany

Abstract

AbstractOligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) generate differentiated mature oligodendrocytes (MOs) during development. In adult brain, OPCs replenish MOs in adaptive plasticity, neurodegenerative disorders, and after trauma. The ability of OPCs to differentiate to MOs decreases with age and is compromised in disease. Here we explored the cell specific and age‐dependent differences in gene expression and H3K27ac histone mark in these two cell types. H3K27ac is indicative of active promoters and enhancers. We developed a novel flow‐cytometry‐based approach to isolate OPC and MO nuclei from human postmortem brain and profiled gene expression and H3K27ac in adult and infant OPCs and MOs genome‐wide. In adult brain, we detected extensive H3K27ac differences between the two cell types with high concordance between gene expression and epigenetic changes. Notably, the expression of genes that distinguish MOs from OPCs appears to be under a strong regulatory control by the H3K27ac modification in MOs but not in OPCs. Comparison of gene expression and H3K27ac between infants and adults uncovered numerous developmental changes in each cell type, which were linked to several biological processes, including cell proliferation and glutamate signaling. A striking example was a subset of histone genes that were highly active in infant samples but fully lost activity in adult brain. Our findings demonstrate a considerable rearrangement of the H3K27ac landscape that occurs during the differentiation of OPCs to MOs and during postnatal development of these cell types, which aligned with changes in gene expression. The uncovered regulatory changes justify further in‐depth epigenetic studies of OPCs and MOs in development and disease.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology

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