Differential expression of synaptic and interneuron genes in the aging human prefrontal cortex

Neurobiology of Aging
Adith MohanPerminder S Sachdev

Abstract

Altered inhibition-excitation balance is implicated in brain aging. We hypothesized that expression of 14 genes encoding proteins localized to synapses or interneurons would show age-related changes relative to 1 another in postmortem tissue from the prefrontal cortex of 37 individuals (18-78 years) and that synaptic or interneuron markers would be differentially correlated with human brain volumes across aging. The majority of genes examined were differentially expressed with age, most being downregulated. Expression of 3 interneuron-related genes was significantly negatively associated with age (calbindin, somatostatin, cholecystokinin), whereas 3 synapse-related genes showed significant age-related expression change (PSD95, GAP43, VGLUT1). On covarying for 2 glial markers (GFAP, IBA1), all 3 interneuron genes and 1 synaptic gene (Growth-associated protein 43) remained significant. Two genes were significantly associated with total brain volume (calbindin, complexin 2) and a marker of synaptic density (synaptophysin) was significantly associated with cortical gray matter volume. Age-related change in expression of genes involved in maintenance of inhibition-excitation balance and regulation of prefrontocortical network dynami...Continue Reading

Citations

May 8, 2020·Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity·Martina ReutzelGunter P Eckert
May 18, 2021·Cerebral Cortex·Nicolás Cano-AstorgaLidia Alonso-Nanclares

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Brain Aging

Here is the latest research on intrinsic and extrinsic factors, as well as pathways and mechanisms that underlie aging in the central nervous system.