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Integrative Analysis Unveils the Correlation of Aminoacyl-tRNA Biosynthesis Metabolites with the Methylation of the SEPSECS Gene in Huntington's Disease Brain Tissue.

Sangeetha VishweswaraiahAli YilmazNazia SaiyedAbdullah KhalidPurvesh R KoladiyaXiaobei PanShirin MaciasAndrew C RobinsonDavid MannBrian D GreenIeva KerševičiūteJuozas GordevičiusUppala RadhakrishnaStewart Francis Graham
Published in: Genes (2023)
The impact of environmental factors on epigenetic changes is well established, and cellular function is determined not only by the genome but also by interacting partners such as metabolites. Given the significant impact of metabolism on disease progression, exploring the interaction between the metabolome and epigenome may offer new insights into Huntington's disease (HD) diagnosis and treatment. Using fourteen post-mortem HD cases and fourteen control subjects, we performed metabolomic profiling of human postmortem brain tissue (striatum and frontal lobe), and we performed DNA methylome profiling using the same frontal lobe tissue. Along with finding several perturbed metabolites and differentially methylated loci, Aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis (adj p -value = 0.0098) was the most significantly perturbed metabolic pathway with which two CpGs of the SEPSECS gene were correlated. This study improves our understanding of molecular biomarker connections and, importantly, increases our knowledge of metabolic alterations driving HD progression.
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