SENS PubMed Publication Search
DNA Damage and Senescence in the Aging and Alzheimer's Disease Cortex Are Not Uniformly Distributed
Biomedicines. 2024 Jun 14;12(6):1327. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines12061327.
Gnanesh Gutta 1, Jay Mehta 2, Rody Kingston 3, Jiaan Xie 1, Eliana Brenner 1, Fulin Ma 3, Karl Herrup 3
Abstract:
...We tracked DNA damage with 53BP1 and cellular senescence with p16 immunostaining of human post-mortem brain samples. We found that DNA damage was significantly increased in the BA9 region of the AD cortex compared with the same region in unaffected controls (UCs). In the AD but not UC cases, the density of cells with DNA damage increased with distance from the pia mater up to approximately layer V and then decreased in deeper areas. This pattern of DNA damage was overlaid with the pattern of cellular senescence, which also increased with cortical depth. On a cell-by-cell basis, we found that the intensities of the two markers were tightly linked in the AD but not the UC brain. To test whether DNA damage was a causal factor in the emergence of the senescence program, we used etoposide treatment to damage the DNA of cultured mouse primary neurons. While DNA damage increased after treatment, after 24 h, no change in the expression of senescence-associated markers was observed. Our work suggests that DNA damage and cellular senescence are both increased in the AD brain and increasingly coupled. We propose that in vivo, the relationship between the two age-related processes is more complex than previously thought.
PMID: 38927534
Free Full-Text: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11201767/