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REST, a master transcriptional regulator in neurodegenerative disease
Journal article   Peer reviewed

REST, a master transcriptional regulator in neurodegenerative disease

Jee-Yeon Hwang and R Suzanne Zukin
Current opinion in neurobiology, Vol.48, pp.193-200
02/01/2018
PMID: 29351877

Abstract

Animals Epigenomics Gene Expression Regulation - physiology Humans Neurodegenerative Diseases - genetics Neurodegenerative Diseases - metabolism Repressor Proteins - genetics Repressor Proteins - metabolism Repressor Proteins - physiology
The restrictive element-1 silencing transcription factor)/NRSF (neuron-restrictive silencing factor (NRSF) is a transcriptional repressor which acts via epigenetic remodeling to silence target genes. Emerging evidence indicates that REST is a master transcriptional regulator of neuron-specific genes not only in neurogenesis and neuronal differentiation, but also in differentiated neurons during the critical period in postnatal brain development, where it plays a role in fine-tuning of genes involved in synaptic plasticity, and in normal aging, where it promotes neuroprotection by repressing genes involved in oxidative stress and β-amyloid toxicity. This review focuses on recent findings that dysregulation of REST and REST-dependent epigenetic remodeling provide a central mechanism critical to the progressive neurodegeneration associated with neurologic disorders and diseases including global ischemia, stroke, epilepsy, Alzheimer's and Huntington's disease.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2017.12.008View
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