Role Of Retroelements In The Development Of COVID-19 Neurological Consequences

IF 0.2 Q4 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
R. Mustafin, A. Kazantseva, Yulia V. Kovas, E. Khusnutdinova
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Retroelements play a key role in brain functioning in humans and other animals, since they represent dynamic regulatory elements controlling the expression of specific neuron types. The activity of retroelements in the brain is impaired under the influence of SARS-CoV-2, penetrating the blood-brain barrier. We propose a new concept, according to which the neurological complications of COVID-19 and their long-term effects are caused by modified expression of retroelements in neurons due to viral effect. This effect is implemented in several ways: a direct effect of the virus on the promoter regions of retroelement-encoding genes, virus interaction with miRNAs causing silencing of transposons, and an effect of the viral RNA on the products of retroelement transcription. Aging-related physiological activation of retroelements in the elderly is responsible for more severe course of COVID-19. The associations of multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Guillain-Barré syndrome, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis with coronavirus lesions also indicate the role of retroelements in such complications, because retroelements are involved in the mechanisms of the development of these diseases. According to meta-analyses, COVID-19-caused neurological complications ranged 36.4-73%. The neuropsychiatric consequences of COVID-19 are observed in patients over a long period after recovery, and their prevalence may exceed those during the acute phase of the disease. Even 12 months after recovery, unmotivated fatigue, headache, mental disorders, and neurocognitive impairment were observed in 82%, 60%, 26.2-45%, and 16.2-46.8% of patients, correspondingly. These manifestations are explained by the role of retroelements in the integration of SARS-CoV-2 into the human genome using their reverse transcriptase and endonuclease, which results in a long-term viral persistence. The research on the role of specific retroelements in these changes can become the basis for developing targeted therapy for neurological consequences of COVID-19 using miRNAs, since epigenetic changes in the functioning of the genome in neurons, affected by transposons, are reversible.
逆转录因子在COVID-19神经系统后果发展中的作用
逆转录因子在人类和其他动物的脑功能中起着关键作用,因为它们代表着控制特定神经元类型表达的动态调控元件。在SARS-CoV-2的影响下,大脑中逆转录因子的活性受损,穿透血脑屏障。我们提出了一个新的概念,根据该概念,COVID-19的神经系统并发症及其长期影响是由病毒作用导致神经元中逆转录因子的表达改变引起的。这种影响通过几种方式实现:病毒对逆转录元件编码基因的启动子区域的直接影响,病毒与mirna的相互作用导致转座子沉默,以及病毒RNA对逆转录元件转录产物的影响。老年人中与衰老相关的逆转录因子的生理激活是导致COVID-19更严重病程的原因。多发性硬化症、帕金森病、格林-巴勒综合征、冠状病毒病变的急性播散性脑脊髓炎的关联也表明逆转录因子在这些并发症中的作用,因为逆转录因子参与了这些疾病的发生机制。根据荟萃分析,covid -19引起的神经系统并发症为36.4% -73%。在患者康复后的很长一段时间内观察到COVID-19的神经精神后果,其患病率可能超过疾病急性期。即使在康复12个月后,仍有82%、60%、26.2-45%和16.2-46.8%的患者出现无动机疲劳、头痛、精神障碍和神经认知障碍。这些表现可以用逆转录因子利用其逆转录酶和核酸内切酶将SARS-CoV-2整合到人类基因组中的作用来解释,从而导致病毒长期存在。由于受转座子影响的神经元基因组功能的表观遗传变化是可逆的,因此研究特异性逆转录因子在这些变化中的作用可以成为利用mirna开发针对COVID-19神经系统后果的靶向治疗的基础。
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来源期刊
Russian Open Medical Journal
Russian Open Medical Journal MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: Russian Open Medical Journal (RusOMJ) (ISSN 2304-3415) is an international peer reviewed open access e-journal. The website is updated quarterly with the RusOMJ’s latest original research, clinical studies, case reports, reviews, news, and comment articles. This Journal devoted to all field of medicine. All the RusOMJ’s articles are published in full on www.romj.org with open access and no limits on word counts. Our mission is to lead the debate on health and to engage, inform, and stimulate doctors, researchers, and other health professionals in ways that will improve outcomes for patients. The RusOMJ team is based mainly in Saratov (Russia), although we also have editors elsewhere in Russian and in other countries.
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