The Discovery of Phages in the Substantia Nigra and Its Implication for Parkinson's Disease.

IF 10.7 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 Multidisciplinary
Research Pub Date : 2025-04-30 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.34133/research.0657
Yun Zhao, Changxian Xiong, Bingwei Wang, Daotong Li, Jiarui Liu, Shizhang Wei, Yujia Hou, Yuan Zhou, Ruimao Zheng
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: A century ago, a mystery between a virus and Parkinson's disease (PD) was described. Owing to the limitation of human brain biopsy and the challenge of electron microscopy in observing virions in human brain tissue, it has been difficult to study the viral etiology of PD. Recent discovery of virobiota reveals that viruses coexist with humans as symbionts. Newly developed transcriptomic sequencing and novel bioinformatic approaches for mining the encrypted virome in human transcriptome make it possible to study the relationship between symbiotic viruses and PD. Nevertheless, whether viruses exist in the human substantia nigra (SN) and whether symbiotic viruses underlie PD pathogenesis remain unknown. Methods: We collected current worldwide human SN transcriptomic datasets from the United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. We used bioinformatic approaches including viruSITE and the Viral-Track to identify the existence of viruses in the SN of patients. The comprehensive RNA sequencing-based virome analysis pipeline was used to characterize the virobiota in the SN. The Pearson's correlation analysis was used to examine the association between the viral RNA fragment counts (VRFCs) and PD-related human gene sequencing reads in the SN. The differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the SN between PD patients and non-PD individuals were used to examine the molecular signatures of PD and also evaluate the impact of symbiotic viruses on the SN. Findings: We observed the existence of viruses in the human SN. A dysbiosis of virobiota was found in the SN of PD patients. A marked correlation between VRFC and PD-related human gene expression was detected in the SN of PD patients. These PD-related human genes correlated to VRFC were named as the virus-correlated PD-related genes (VPGs). We identified 3 bacteriophages (phages), including the Proteus phage VB_PmiS-Isfahan, the Escherichia phage phiX174, and the Lactobacillus phage Sha1, that might impair the gene expression of neural cells in the SN of PD patients. The Proteus phage VB_PmiS-Isfahan was a common virus in the SN of patients from the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. VPGs and DEGs together highlighted that the phages might dampen dopamine biosynthesis and weaken the cGAS-STING function. Interpretation: This is the first study to discover the involvement of phages in PD pathogenesis. A lifelong low symbiotic viral load in the SN may be a contributor to PD pathogenesis. Our findings unlocked the black box between brain virobiota and PD, providing a novel insight into PD etiology from the perspective of phage-human symbiosis.

黑质噬菌体的发现及其对帕金森病的意义。
背景:一个世纪前,一种病毒与帕金森病(PD)之间的神秘关系被描述出来。由于人脑活检的局限性和电子显微镜在观察人脑组织病毒粒子方面的挑战,对PD的病毒病因的研究一直很困难。最近对病毒生物群的发现表明病毒与人类是共生体。新发展的转录组测序和新的生物信息学方法挖掘人类转录组中的加密病毒,使研究共生病毒与PD之间的关系成为可能。然而,病毒是否存在于人类黑质(SN)中,以及共生病毒是否在PD发病机制中起作用仍不清楚。方法:我们收集了来自美国、英国、荷兰和瑞士的当前全球人类SN转录组数据集。我们使用生物信息学方法,包括viruSITE和virus - track来确定患者SN中是否存在病毒。利用基于RNA测序的综合病毒组分析管道对SN中的病毒群进行了表征。Pearson相关分析用于检测SN中病毒RNA片段计数(vrfc)与pd相关人类基因测序读数之间的关系。利用PD患者与非PD个体SN中差异表达基因(DEGs)来检测PD的分子特征,并评估共生病毒对SN的影响。结果:我们观察到人类SN中存在病毒。PD患者SN中存在菌群失调。在PD患者的SN中检测到VRFC与PD相关的人类基因表达显著相关。这些与VRFC相关的pd相关人类基因被命名为病毒相关pd相关基因(VPGs)。我们鉴定出3种噬菌体(噬菌体),包括Proteus噬菌体vb_pmisi - isfahan、Escherichia噬菌体phiX174和Lactobacillus噬菌体Sha1,它们可能损害PD患者SN中神经细胞的基因表达。变形杆菌噬菌体vb_pmi - isfahan是英国、荷兰和瑞士患者SN中常见的病毒。VPGs和DEGs共同表明噬菌体可能抑制多巴胺的生物合成并削弱cGAS-STING功能。解释:这是首次发现噬菌体参与PD发病机制的研究。SN中终生的低共生病毒载量可能是PD发病的一个因素。我们的发现打开了脑病毒群与PD之间的黑箱,从噬菌体-人共生的角度对PD病因学提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Research
Research Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
13.40
自引率
3.60%
发文量
0
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Research serves as a global platform for academic exchange, collaboration, and technological advancements. This journal welcomes high-quality research contributions from any domain, with open arms to authors from around the globe. Comprising fundamental research in the life and physical sciences, Research also highlights significant findings and issues in engineering and applied science. The journal proudly features original research articles, reviews, perspectives, and editorials, fostering a diverse and dynamic scholarly environment.
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