Music compensates for altered gene expression in age-related cognitive disorders
Gómez Carballa, Alberto; Navarro, L.; Pardo Seco, Jacobo José; Bello, X.; Pischedda, Sara; Viz Lasheras, Sandra; Camino-Mera, A.; Currás, M.J.; Ferreirós, I.; Mallah ., Narmeen; Rey-Vázquez, S.; Redondo, L.; Dacosta-Urbieta, A.; Caamaño-Viña, F.; Rivero Calle, Irene; Rodriguez-Tenreiro, C.; Martinón Torres, Federico; Salas Ellacuriaga, Antonio

Identifiers
Identifiers
Date issued
2023Journal title
Scientific Reports
Type of content
Artigo
MeSH
Humans | Music | Cohort Studies | Cognition Disorders | Cognitive Dysfunction | Alzheimer Disease | Gene ExpressionAbstract
Extensive literature has explored the beneficial effects of music in age-related cognitive disorders (ACD), but limited knowledge exists regarding its impact on gene expression. We analyzed transcriptomes of ACD patients and healthy controls, pre-post a music session (n = 60), and main genes/pathways were compared to those dysregulated in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) as revealed by a multi-cohort study (n = 1269 MCI/AD and controls). Music was associated with 2.3 times more whole-genome gene expression, particularly on neurodegeneration-related genes, in ACD than in controls. Co-expressed gene-modules and pathways analysis demonstrated that music impacted autophagy, vesicle and endosome organization, biological processes commonly dysregulated in MCI/AD. Notably, the data indicated a strong negative correlation between musically-modified genes/pathways in ACD and those dysregulated in MCI/AD. These findings highlight the compensatory effect of music on genes/biological processes affected in MCI/AD, providing insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the benefits of music on these disorders.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
