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Opposing effects of histone H2A.Z on memory,...
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Opposing effects of histone H2A.Z on memory, transcription and pathology in male and female Alzheimer’s disease mice and patients

Abstract

Abstract Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease that disproportionately impacts women, but underlying mechanisms for sex-divergent outcomes are unknown. Here, we show that the histone variant H2A.Z is a novel sex-specific regulator of AD in human patients and AD model mice. Specifically, H2A.Z binding in chromatin declines in female and increases in male AD patients, indicating opposite patterns of AD-related H2A.Z dysregulation each sex. These sex differences were recapitulated in the 5xFAD model of AD, in which females accumulated H2A.Z at early disease stages and lost H2A.Z as the disease progressed, suggesting that H2A.Z occupancy shifts with advancing disease. Males showed no change in H2A.Z binding in early disease, but exhibited increased binding as disease progressed, albeit to a lesser extent than females. Consistent with sex-specific H2A.Z dysregulation, H2A.Z depletion produced sex-specific changes in gene expression, whereby H2A.Z was more repressive in female than in male mice and in 5xFAD than in WT males, suggesting that H2A.Z’s role in transcription varies with sex and disease. Moreover, H2A.Z depletion improved memory and AD pathology in females, while impairing memory and worsening pathology in male mice. Together, these data suggest that H2A.Z is protective in males and detrimental in females with AD, with key implications for sex-specific therapeutic targeting of chromatin factors.

Authors

Luo JQ; Hategan LA; Creighton S; Hua S; McLean TAB; Dahi TA; Jin Z; Pirri F; Winston SM; Reeves IL

Publication date

June 1, 2025

DOI

10.1101/2025.05.28.656659

Preprint server

bioRxiv
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