APA
Gil Alberdi, Laura & Niño, Sandra A. & Guerrero, Carmen & Jiménez-Capdeville, María E. .Phospho-Tau and Chromatin Landscapes in Early and Late Alzheimer's Disease.
ISO 690
Gil Alberdi, Laura & Niño, Sandra A. & Guerrero, Carmen & Jiménez-Capdeville, María E.. Phospho-Tau and Chromatin Landscapes in Early and Late Alzheimer's Disease.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/25898
Resumen:
Cellular identity is determined through complex patterns of gene expression. Chromatin,
the dynamic structure containing genetic information, is regulated through epigenetic modulators,
mainly by the histone code. One of the main challenges for the cell is maintaining functionality and
identity, despite the accumulation of DNA damage throughout the aging process. Replicative cells
can remain in a senescent state or develop a malign cancer phenotype. In contrast, post-mitotic cells
such as pyramidal neurons maintain extraordinary functionality despite advanced age, but they
lose their identity. This review focuses on tau, a protein that protects DNA, organizes chromatin,
and plays a crucial role in genomic stability. In contrast, tau cytosolic aggregates are considered
hallmarks of Alzheimer´s disease (AD) and other neurodegenerative disorders called tauopathies.
Here, we explain AD as a phenomenon of chromatin dysregulation directly involving the epigenetic
histone code and a progressive destabilization of the tau¿chromatin interaction, leading to the
consequent dysregulation of gene expression. Although this destabilization could be lethal for
post-mitotic neurons, tau protein mediates profound cellular transformations that allow for their
temporal survival.