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

Identificadores
Identificadores
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Fecha de publicación
2023Título de revista
Scientific Reports
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
MeSH
Humans | Music | Cohort Studies | Cognition Disorders | Cognitive Dysfunction | Alzheimer Disease | Gene ExpressionResumen
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.
Excepto si se señala otra cosa, la licencia del ítem se describe como Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
