| Literature DB >> 16430779 |
Priyanka Sharma1, R D Senthilkumar, Vani Brahmachari, Elayanambi Sundaramoorthy, Anubha Mahajan, Amitabh Sharma, Shantanu Sengupta.
Abstract
Homocysteine is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. It is also known to be associated with a variety of complex disorders. While there are a large number of independent studies implicating homocysteine in isolated pathways, the mechanism of homocysteine induced adverse effects are not clear. Homocysteine-induced modulation of gene expression through alteration of methylation status or by hitherto unknown mechanisms is predicted to lead to several pathological conditions either directly or indirectly. In the present manuscript, using literature mining approach, we have identified the genes that are modulated directly or indirectly by an elevated level of homocysteine. These genes were then placed in appropriate pathways in an attempt to understand the molecular basis of homocysteine induced complex disorders and to provide a resource for selection of genes for polymorphism screening and analysis of mutations as well as epigenetic modifications in relation to hyperhomocysteinemia. We have identified 135 genes in 1137 abstracts that either modulate the levels of homocysteine or are modulated by elevated levels of homocysteine. Mapping the genes to their respective pathways revealed that an elevated level of homocysteine leads to the atherosclerosis either by directly affecting lipid metabolism and transport or via oxidative stress and/or Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) stress. Elevated levels of homocysteine also decreases the bioavailability of nitric oxide and modulates the levels of other metabolites including S-adenosyl methionine and S-adenosyl homocysteine which may result in cardiovascular or neurological disorders. The ER stress emerges as the common pathway that relates to apoptosis, atherosclerosis and neurological disorders and is modulated by levels of homocysteine. The comprehensive network collated has lead to the identification of genes that are modulated by homocysteine indicating that homocysteine exerts its effect not only through modulating the substrate levels for various catalytic processes but also through regulation of expression of genes involved in complex diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16430779 PMCID: PMC1395315 DOI: 10.1186/1476-511X-5-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Methionine-Homocysteine metabolism and related pathways. A representation of the methionine cycle (central), transulfuration pathway and its connection to folate cycle, glycolysis pathway and urea cycle. The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively.
List of genes identified by literature mining that are modulated by elevated level of homocysteine
| 1 | Adk | Adenosine kinase | Methionine Metabolism |
| 2 | Agt1 | Angiotensin I | Renin – Angiotensin |
| 3 | Ahcyl1 | S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase – like | Methionine Metabolism |
| 4 | Bax | BCL2-associated × protein | Apoptosis |
| 5 | Bcl-2 | B-cell cll/lymphoma 2 | Apoptosis |
| 6 | Bhmt2 | Betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase2 | Methionine Metabolism |
| 7 | Calm1 | Calmodulin 1 | Signaling |
| 8 | Proxy1/Cap43 | Protein regulated by oxygen 1 | Hypoxia |
| 9 | Casp12 | caspase-12 | Apoptosis |
| 10 | Casp3 | caspase-3 | Apoptosis |
| 11 | Cav3 | Caveolin | Apoptosis |
| 12 | Ccr2 | Chemokine receptor 2 | Atherosclerosis |
| 13 | Cdk2 | Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 | Apoptosis |
| 14 | Cetp | Cholesteryl ester transfer protein | Lipid metabolism |
| 15 | Cgrp | Calcitonin gene related peptide | Signaling |
| 16 | Cck | Cholecystokinin | Insulin secretion |
| 17 | Clu | Clusterin | Apoptosis |
| 18 | Cmyc | Myc proto-oncogene protein | Apoptosis |
| 19 | Cnp | C-type natriuretic peptide | Vasorelaxant activity. |
| 20 | Crp | C-AMP receptor protein | Apoptosis/signaling |
| 21 | Cubn | Cubilin | Vitamin B12 Transport |
| 22 | Cx43 | Connexin43 | Integral to plasma membrane/Signaling |
| 23 | Ccna1 | Cyclin A1 | Cell cycle |
| 24 | clcn | Chloride ion channel gene | Chloride transport |
| 25 | Cyc | Cytochrome | Apoptosis |
| 26 | Demethylase | Demethylase | Metabolism |
| 27 | Dhfr | Dihydrofolate reductase | Metabolism |
| 28 | Dnmt1 | DNA Methyltransferase 1 | Metabolism |
| 29 | Dnmt2 | DNA Methyltransferase 2 | Metabolism |
| 30 | Dnmt3a | DNA Methyltransferase 3 | Metabolism |
| 31 | Erk2 | Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase 2 | Signalling |
| 32 | Fak | Focal adhesion kinase | Apoptosis |
| 33 | Fbp1/ Folr1 | Folate-Binding Protein1 | Folate transport |
| 34 | Fbp2 | Folate-Binding Protein2 | Folate transport |
| 35 | G6pdh | Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase | Metabolism |
| 36 | Gad67 | Glutamic acid decarboxylase 67 | Apoptosis |
| 37 | Gadd153 | Glutamic acid decarboxylase 153 | Apoptosis |
| 38 | Gadd45 | Glutamic acid decarboxylase 45 | Apoptosis |
| 39 | Gata4 | GATA-Binding Protein 4 | Transcription factor |
| 40 | GPX1 | Glutathione Peroxidase | Anti-oxidant |
| 41 | Gsh1 | GS homeobox 1 | Transcription Factor |
| 42 | Grp78 | Glucose related protein 78 | Apoptosis |
| 43 | Grp94 | Glucose related protein 98 | Apoptosis |
| 44 | H2B | Histone 2B | Histone protein |
| 45 | H3 | Histone 3 | Histone protein |
| 46 | HDACs | Histone deacetylases | Histone Deacetylation |
| 47 | Hmgcr | Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl-Coa Reductase | Lipid metabolism |
| 48 | Hmt | Homocysteine-S-methyltransferase | Metabolism |
| 49 | Ikβα | Inhibitor Of Kappa Light Chain Gene Enhancer | Signaling |
| 50 | IL-1 | Interleukin 1 | Signaling |
| 51 | IL-6 | Interleukin 6 | Signaling |
| 52 | IL-8 | Interleukin 8 | Signaling |
| 53 | Inmt | Indolethylamine N-methyltransferase | Protein methylation |
| 54 | iNOS | Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase | Nitric oxide stress |
| 55 | Interferon | Interferon | Signaling |
| 56 | Ifg | Ifngamma | Signaling |
| 57 | Ldhd | D-Lactate Dehydrogenase | Metabolism |
| 58 | Ldlr | Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor | Lipid metabolism |
| 59 | Lpl | Lipoprotein lipase | Lipid metabolism |
| 60 | Lox1 | Lectin like oxidized LDL receptor-1 | Lipid Transport |
| 61 | Lpa | Apolipoprotein | Lipid metabolism |
| 62 | lyase | Lyase | Lipid metabolism |
| 63 | Mcp1 | Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein 1 | Atherosclerosis |
| 64 | Mbd2 | Methyl-CpG-Binding Domain Protein 2 | Methylation binding protein |
| 65 | Mecp2 | Methyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2 | Methylation binding protein |
| 66 | Mapk/Mek | Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinase | Signalling |
| 67 | Mgmt | O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase | Apoptosis |
| 68 | Mmp3 | Matrix metalloproteinase 3 | Remodeling of extracellular matrix |
| 69 | Mtap | Methyl Thioadenosine Phosphorylase | Metabolism |
| 70 | Mtase | Methyltransferase | Metabolism |
| 71 | NF-Kβ | Nuclear Factor Kappa-B | Signaling |
| 72 | Nmda | N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors | Alzheimer Disease |
| 73 | Nos2 | Nitric Oxide Synthase 2 | Nitric oxide Synthesis |
| 74 | P21 ras | P21 ras | Signaling |
| 75 | P38 | Serine /threonine protein kinase belong to MAPK subfamily | Apoptosis |
| 76 | P53 | Tumor protein p53 | Apoptosis |
| 77 | Pai-1 | Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 | Blood coagulation |
| 78 | Pam | Peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase | Neuro peptide amidation |
| 79 | Icmt/Pcmt | Isoprenylcysteine Carboxylmethyltransferase | Signaling. |
| 80 | Pdgf | Platelet-derived growth factor | Inhibits apoptosis |
| 81 | Pemt | Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) N-Methyltransferase | Methylation of PE |
| 82 | Pkc | Protein kinase C | Apoptosis |
| 89 | Ppar alpha | Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-Alpha | Signaling |
| 84 | PPARgamma2 | Proliferator-Activated Receptor-Gamma2 | Signaling |
| 85 | Prmt | Protein Arginine N-Methyltransferase | Protein methylation |
| 86 | Ps1 | Presenilin 1 | Alzheimer Disease |
| 87 | S3a | Ribosomal protein S3A | Structural constituent of Ribosome |
| 88 | Smap8 | smooth muscle-associated protein 8 | Signaling |
| 89 | Srebp1 | sterol regulatory element binding protein-1 | Lipid Transport |
| 90 | Sst | Somatostatin | Alzheimer Disease |
| 91 | Tdag51 | T-cell death-associated gene 51 | Apoptosis |
| 92 | TGFbeta | Transforming growth factor beta | Apoptosis |
| 93 | TNFalpha | tumor necrosis factor alpha | Signaling |
| 94 | TNFRSF1B | Tumor necrosis factor receptor 2 gene | Signaling |
| 95 | Timp1 | Tissue Inhibitor Of Metalloproteinase 1 | Signaling |
| 96 | tPA | Tissue-type plasminogen activator | Blood Coagulation |
| 97 | Vcam 1 | Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule 1 | Cell adhesion/Signaling |
| 98 | Yy1 | Yin Yang 1 | Transcription factor |
| 99 | F2 | Coagulation factor II | Blood Coagulation |
| 100 | HemK/PrmC | N5-glutamine AdoMet-dependent methyltransferase | Methylation |
| 101 | ABCC2 | ATP-Binding Cassette subfamily C | Cellular cisplatin transporter. |
| 102 | Ace | Angiotensin converting enzyme | Renin – Angiotensin |
| 103 | Nat1 | arylamine N-acetyltransferase type-1 | Detoxification of a plethora of hydrazine and arylamine drugs |
| 104 | Gnmt | Glycine N-Methyltransferase | Methylation |
| 105 | Apo B | Apolipoproteine B | Lipid metabolism |
| 106 | Ins | Insulin | Signalling |
| 107 | Sod | Super Oxide Dismutase | Anti-oxidant |
| 108 | ApoC3 | Apolipoprotein C-III | Lipid metabolism |
| 109 | Atf3 | Activating transcription factor | Transcription factor |
| 110 | Ap1 | activating protein-1 | Transcription factor |
| 111 | Fcmt | Farnesylcysteine methyltransferase | Methylation |
| 112 | Hmox | Heme oxygenase | Biliverdin metabolism |
List of genes identified by literature mining that modulate homocysteine levels
| 1. | Mthfr | Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase | Conversion of 5, 10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate to 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate. |
| 2. | Cbs | Cystathionine beta-synthase | Condensation of homo-cysteine and serine to form cystathionine |
| 3. | Mtr | Methyltetrahydrofolatehomocysteine methyltransferase | Remethylation of homocysteine to methionine |
| 4. | Mtrr | Methionine synthase reductase | Reductive regeneration of cob(I)alamin cofactor required for the maintenance of MTR in a functional state |
| 5. | Rfc-1 | Reduced-folate carrier | 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate internalization in cell |
| 6 | Gcp II/Folh1 | Glutamate Carboxypeptidase II | Polyglutamate converted to monoglutamate folate by action of the enzyme folylpoly gammaglutamate carboxy-peptidase (FGCPI), an enzyme expressed by GCPII. |
| 7 | eNos | Endothelial Nitric oxide synthase | Conversion of L-Arginine to L-Citrulline and nitric oxide synthase (NO) |
| 8. | Tc II | Transcobalamine II | Transport of vitamin B12 |
| 9. | Shmt1 | Serine Hydroxymethyltransferase 1 | Reversible conversion of serine and tetrahydrofolate to glycine and 5, 10-methylene tetrahydrofolate. |
| 10. | Tyms | Thymidylate Synthase | 5, 10-methylene THF and deoxyuridylate to form dihydro-folate and thymidylate. |
| 11 | Cth | Cystathionine Gamma-Lyase | Hydrolysis of cystathionine to cysteine and α-Ketoglutarate |
| 12 | Mthfd | Methylene-tetra hydrofolate dehydrogenase | Conversion of 5, 10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate to5, 10methenyl-tetrahydrofolate. |
| 13 | Mthfs | Methenyltetrahydrofolate synthetase | Conversion of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate to 5, 10-methenyltetrahydrofolate. |
| 14 | Apo E | Apolipoproteine E | Mediates the binding, internalization, and catabolism of lipoprotein particles. |
| 15 | Vegf | Vascular endothelial growth factor | Growth factor active in angiogenesis, vasculogenesis and endothelial cell growth. |
| 16 | Pon1 | Paraoxonase 1 | Hydrolyzes the toxic organo-phosphorus. It also mediate an enzymatic protection of LDL against oxidative modification. |
| 17 | Bhmt | Betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase | In Liver & kidney it catalyses the conversion of betaine to dimethyl glycine (DMG). |
| 18 | Mat1A | Methionine Adenosyltransferase 1A | Methionine to SAM by transfer of the adenosyl moiety of ATP to the sulfur atom of methionine |
| 19 | Ahcy | S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase | Hydrolysis of AdoHcy to adenosine and homocysteine |
| 20 | Cbl | Cystathionine beta lyase | Conversion of cystathionine to homocysteine. |
| 22 | Factor V | Coagulation factor V | Cofactor for the factor Xa-catalyzed activation of prothrombin to the clotting enzyme thrombin. |
| 23 | Pai-1 | Prothrombin activator inhibitor-1 | Inhibition of fibrinolysis by inhibiting the plasminogen-activator and t-PA. |
Figure 2Hyperhomocysteinemia and Oxidative Stress. Homocysteine might directly or indirectly lead to oxidative stress via the pathways shown in the figure. The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively. X – Inhibition
Mechanisms mediating the anti-atherosclerotic effect of nitric oxide
| Promotion of SMC proliferation | 131 |
| Inhibition of platelet aggregation | 132 |
| Reduction in endothelial activation & Inhibition of MCP-1 | 133, 134 |
| Stabilizes NF-Kβ inhibitor, Ikβα | 135 |
| Inhibition of LDL oxidation & lipid peroxidation | 136,137 |
| Reduces super oxide generation | 138 |
| Decrease the Expression of PAI-1 | 34 |
| Nitric oxide regulates vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 gene expression | 139 |
Figure 3Elevated homocysteine levels and apoptosis. Elevated levels of homocysteine directly (branch 1 and 2) or via ER stress (branch 3 and 4) lead to apoptosis. Homocysteine also might lead to cell survival via calcium dependent ERK phosphorylation (branch 5). The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively.
Figure 4Elevated homocysteine levels and the Coagulation pathway. Elevated homocysteine levels may lead to thrombosis either by increasing the activity of the tissue factor (branch 1) thereby facilitating the coagulation cascade or by inhibiting the anticoagulant pathways (branch 2 and 3). The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively.
Figure 5Elevated Homocysteine is associated with atherosclerosis. Elevated level of homocysteine affects the cholesterol biosynthesis (branch 1), expression of extracellular matrix proteins (branch 2), enhance endothelial LOX-1 gene expression and TNFα release upon oxLDL stimulation (branch 3,branch 8), affect the expression of cell adhesion molecule (branch 4), enhance SMC proliferation by increasing cyclin A activity (branch 5), induce the expression of LPL both at the transcription and translation level presumably via PKC activation (branch 6,7) that modulates inflammatory gene response in endothelial cells. Elevated level of homocysteine also down regulate the expression of PPARs (Figure 6, branch 9). The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively.
Figure 6Interactions between proinflammatory cytokines. The interaction between different proinflammatory cytokines is shown which may be modulated by homocysteine levels resulting in pathological consequences.
Figure 7Pathways that link elevated homocysteine level with Neurological disorders. Elevated homocysteine levels may cause neurological diseases by various mechanisms which include), altered methylation (branch 1 & 4), ER stress (branch 2), direct interaction with receptors (branch 3) and biomarker of apoptosis (branch 4). The Symbols shaded in color are the gene names given included in the gene-list. The genes marked in blue have been identified by literature based searches as mentioned in the methods section. The solid and dotted lines indicate direct and indirect (multi step) interaction/ conversion respectively.
An exhaustive list of Gene polymorphism studies that have reported to affects the plasma level of homocysteine
| 1 | MTHFR | C677T | A222V | ↑ | ↓ [140] |
| 2 | CBS | 31 bp VNTR (exon 13-intron 13) | ----- | ↑**[141–142] | ↓ |
| 3 | MTR | A2756G | D919G | ↓ [121] | N.R |
| 4 | MTRR | A66G | I22M | ↑ [145] | N.R |
| 5 | MAT | G791A | R264H | NE [146] | ↓ [147] |
| 6 | TYMS | A 28-bp repeat (Enhancer region) | -------- | ↑ [124,125] | Alteration in transcription level[120] |
| 7 | CTH | G1346T | S403I | ↑ [126] | N.R |
| 8 | GCP II/Folh1 | C1561T | H475Y | ↑ [127,128] | ↓ [128] |
| 9 | RFC-1 | G80A | R26H | NE [129] | N.R |
| 10 | eNOS | G894T | E298D | ↑ [150] | N.E [151] |
| 11 | TC II | C776G | P259R | ↑ [130] | ↓ [155] |
| 12 | APO E | Epsilon4 alleles | -------- | ↑ [156] | N.R |
| 13 | PAI-1 | 4G Ins/del (Promoter) | -------- | ↑ [157] | Affects the response of the PAI-1 promoter to cytokines [158] |
| 14 | F2 | G20210A (3'UTR) | -------- | ↑ [159] | ↑ [160] |
| 15 | Factor V | G1691A | R506Q | ↑ [159] | Impairs APC mediated inactivation of factor Va [161] |
N.R Not reported in the literature
N .E No Effect was observed.
* Border line association was observed in the presence of high folate concentration.
** After post methionine load
(P) Presence of low concentration of pyridoxal -5-phosphate.