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Publication : Altered histone acetylation is associated with age-dependent memory impairment in mice.

First Author  Peleg S Year  2010
Journal  Science Volume  328
Issue  5979 Pages  753-6
PubMed ID  20448184 Mgi Jnum  J:159516
Mgi Id  MGI:4443215 Doi  10.1126/science.1186088
Citation  Peleg S, et al. (2010) Altered histone acetylation is associated with age-dependent memory impairment in mice. Science 328(5979):753-6
abstractText  As the human life span increases, the number of people suffering from cognitive decline is rising dramatically. The mechanisms underlying age-associated memory impairment are, however, not understood. Here we show that memory disturbances in the aging brain of the mouse are associated with altered hippocampal chromatin plasticity. During learning, aged mice display a specific deregulation of histone H4 lysine 12 (H4K12) acetylation and fail to initiate a hippocampal gene expression program associated with memory consolidation. Restoration of physiological H4K12 acetylation reinstates the expression of learning-induced genes and leads to the recovery of cognitive abilities. Our data suggest that deregulated H4K12 acetylation may represent an early biomarker of an impaired genome-environment interaction in the aging mouse brain.
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