PLoS ONE (May 2008)

Promoter-wide hypermethylation of the ribosomal RNA gene promoter in the suicide brain.

  • Patrick O McGowan,
  • Aya Sasaki,
  • Tony C T Huang,
  • Alexander Unterberger,
  • Matthew Suderman,
  • Carl Ernst,
  • Michael J Meaney,
  • Gustavo Turecki,
  • Moshe Szyf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 5
p. e2085

Abstract

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BackgroundAlterations in gene expression in the suicide brain have been reported and for several genes DNA methylation as an epigenetic regulator is thought to play a role. rRNA genes, that encode ribosomal RNA, are the backbone of the protein synthesis machinery and levels of rRNA gene promoter methylation determine rRNA transcription.Methodology/principal findingsWe test here by sodium bisulfite mapping of the rRNA promoter and quantitative real-time PCR of rRNA expression the hypothesis that epigenetic differences in critical loci in the brain are involved in the pathophysiology of suicide. Suicide subjects in this study were selected for a history of early childhood neglect/abuse, which is associated with decreased hippocampal volume and cognitive impairments. rRNA was significantly hypermethylated throughout the promoter and 5' regulatory region in the brain of suicide subjects, consistent with reduced rRNA expression in the hippocampus. This difference in rRNA methylation was not evident in the cerebellum and occurred in the absence of genome-wide changes in methylation, as assessed by nearest neighbor.Conclusions/significanceThis is the first study to show aberrant regulation of the protein synthesis machinery in the suicide brain. The data implicate the epigenetic modulation of rRNA in the pathophysiology of suicide.