| Literature DB >> 22567321 |
Abstract
Many genes have been implicated in schizophrenia as have viral prenatal or adult infections and toxoplasmosis or Lyme disease. Several autoantigens also target key pathology-related proteins. These factors are interrelated. Susceptibility genes encode for proteins homologous to those of the pathogens while the autoantigens are homologous to pathogens' proteins, suggesting that the risk-promoting effects of genes and risk factors are conditional upon each other, and dependent upon protein matching between pathogen and susceptibility gene products. Pathogens' proteins may act as dummy ligands, decoy receptors, or via interactome interference. Many such proteins are immunogenic suggesting that antibody mediated knockdown of multiple schizophrenia gene products could contribute to the disease, explaining the immune activation in the brain and lymphocytes in schizophrenia, and the preponderance of immune-related gene variants in the schizophrenia genome. Schizophrenia may thus be a "pathogenetic" autoimmune disorder, caused by pathogens, genes, and the immune system acting together, and perhaps preventable by pathogen elimination, or curable by the removal of culpable antibodies and antigens.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22567321 PMCID: PMC3335463 DOI: 10.4061/2011/128318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathog ISSN: 2090-3057
Some of the pathogens implicated in Schizophrenia, either in relation to maternal infection, or to infection in later life.
| Pre- and perinatal maternal infection | Juvenile (in offspring) | Adult |
|---|---|---|
| Rubella (first trimester) [ | Mumps or cytomegalovirus infection | HSV-1 seropositivity related to grey matter volume [ |
|
| ||
| Poliovirus (second trimester) [ | Coxsackie B5 infection perinatally [ | HSV-1 (in Afro-Americans) or HHV-6 seropositivity: Inverse correlation with HSV-2 and cytomegalovirus [ |
|
| ||
| Measles, Varicella zoster or polio (seropositivity at birth) [ | Childhood meningitis (0–4 years old) [ | Borna disease virus seropositivty [ |
|
| ||
| HSV-2 (antibodies assayed at the end of pregnancy) [ | Coronavirus seropositivity [ | |
|
| ||
| Influenza B (seropositivity at birth) [ | Elevated retrovirus HERV-W transcripts [ | |
|
| ||
| Toxoplasmosis (antibodies during pregnancy) [ | Measles virus seropositivity [ | |
|
| ||
| Hepatitis C [ | ||
|
| ||
| Toxoplasmosis [ | ||
|
| ||
| Correlation with the incidence of Lyme disease (Borrelia) [ | ||
Pathogens expressing proteins with homology to the autoantigens reported in schizophrenia. The size of the tags is proportional the number of pathogen's proteins that are homologous to the autoantigen. Note that the profile is different for each pathogen. The original BLAST files can be found at http://www.polygenicpathways.co.uk/blasts.htm.
|
|
Viruses reported to bind to DISC1 interactome partners.
| DISC1 partner gene symbol | Protein name | Viral binder |
|---|---|---|
| ACTG1 | Actin, cytoplasmic 2 | HIV-1 [ |
| ACTN2 | Actinin, alpha 2 | Hepatitis C [ |
| AKAP9 | A-kinase anchor protein 9 | Epstein-Barr [ |
| ATF4 | Cyclic AMP-dependent transcription factor ATF-4 | HSV1 [ |
| ATF5 | Cyclic AMP-dependent transcription factor ATF-5 | HTLV1 [ |
| BICD1 | Protein bicaudal D homolog 1 | Cytomegalovirus [ |
| C14orf135 | Uncharacterized protein C14orf135 precursor | Hepatitis C [ |
| DCTN1 | Dynactin-1 | HSV1 [ |
| DCTN2 | Dynactin subunit 2 | Dynactins are involved in the transport of the adenoviruses, HSV-1, the hantaan virus, HTLV-1 and the poliovirus [ |
| DNAJC7 | DnaJ homolog subfamily C member 7 | Part of a complex forming the coxsackie virus receptor [ |
| DYNC1H1 | Dynein heavy chain, cytosolic | Adenovirus (in a complex with dynactin and NDEL1) [ |
| EEF2 | Elongation factor 2 | Epstein Barr [ |
| EIF3S3 | Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3 subunit 3 | Hepatitis C [ |
| FEZ1 | Fasciculation and elongation protein zeta 1 (zygin I) | JC Polyomavirus [ |
| HERC2 | HECT domain and RCC1-like domain-containing protein 2 | Papillomavirus 16 [ |
| KIF3C | Kinesin-like protein KIF3C | HIV-1 [ |
| MATR3 | Matrin-3 | HSV1 [ |
| NDEL1 | Nuclear distribution protein nudE-like 1 | Part of a complex involved in Adenovirus transport (with dynactin and cytoplasmic dynein) [ |
| PAFAH1B1 | Platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase IB subunit alpha | Binds to Poliovirus P3 protein and HIV-1 Tat [ |
| PCNT | Pericentrin | Involved in the microtubular transport of the adenovirus [ |
| PGK1 | Phosphoglycerate kinase 1 | Epstein-Barr [ |
| SMARCE1 | SWI/SNF-related matrix-associated actin-dependent regulator of chromatin subfamily E member 1 | HSV-1 [ |
| STX18 | Syntaxin-18 | Papillomavirus [ |
| TNKS | Tankyrase-1 | Epstein-Barr [ |
| TUBB | Tubulin beta chain | Epstein-Barr [ |
| YWHAE | 14-3-3 protein epsilon | Hepatitis C [ |
| YWHAQ | 14-3-3 protein theta | HIV [ |
| YWHAZ | 14-3-3 protein zeta/delta | HSV1 [ |
Figure 1Screenshots of the pictorial representation of the viral BLAST results against the human proteome. The streaks dotted throughout the human genome/proteome represent the areas of homology, some with contiguous sequences of 5 or more amino acids. The number of hits is shown for each virus or pathogen. The figure also shows the total coverage of human chromosome 10 by viral gene homologues. The top set of figures were from unfiltered blasts while the bottom set of 6 figures represent filtered blasts using the query “schizophrenia”.
Figure 2(a) Varicella protein alignments within DISC1: the boxed regions show the region of alignment, and the blue letters denote 100% identity. This is not an alignment of the whole Varicella proteome but represents fragments of the same or different Varicella proteins that align with DISC1 fragments (vatches). The larger font delineates highly antigenic regions of DISC1 with an antigenicity index of >0.8 (Figure 4). (b) Other viral vatches within the DISC1 protein. The vatches are colour or format coded in relation to the different viruses. (c) Viral vatches for the risk factors implicated in schizophrenia in relation to the highly immunogenic regions of DISC1.
Figure 3(a) Venn diagrams of the number of Schizophrenia gene products (N = 632) with homology to the rubella, HERV-W and influenza viruses. The singleton in SZ-genes was different on each occasion: Thus, all genes are covered. (b) The viral matching spectra of DISC1, neuregulin, the dopamine D2 receptor and transcription factor 4. The Y-axis depicts the number of word occurrences on the original BLAST results page. Note the logarithmic axis. (c) The number of pathogens expressing proteins with homology to the protein products of schizophrenia susceptibility genes. Those marked by an asterisk are within the 30 top-ranked genes in SZ-gene http://www.szgene.org/.
Human proteins with homology to proteins expressed by pathogens. The size of the tags reflects the number of pathogen's proteins that are homologous to the human protein: the filters used are described. The number of schizophrenia susceptibility genes within each of these datasets is shown in the left-hand column. Certain genes are classified according to family and are highlighted in red. Gene definitions and the original BLAST files can be found at http://www.polygenicpathways.co.uk/blasts.htm. Note that the homologues are often clustered in families (e.g., HTR1A, HTR2A, HTR3A, HTR3B, HTR3E, HTR5A, and HTR7).
|
|
Figure 4The antigenicity (B-cell epitope prediction) of DISC1: the amino acid sequences with an index of >0.35 are considered as epitopes. A value of 0.8 was chosen to define highly antigenic regions as seen in Figure 2. The amino acid sequences of these highly antigenic regions are shown.
Figure 5The DISC1 interactome see http://www.polygenicpathways.co.uk/discforum.htm. Proteins in red are homologous to Rubella proteins.
Figure 6A screen shot of the HSV-2 BLAST results using the filter “dopamine receptor”. The repeated patterns correspond to dopamine receptors on different chromosomes as shown in Table 1. Homology with glutamate, serotonin, GABA, acetylcholine and other receptors is also noted.
The number of schizophrenia gene products in KEGG pathways related to immunity, and viral or pathogen life cycles.
| Pathogen pathways | Viral pathways | Immune | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toxoplasmosis | 16 | Focal adhesion | 20 | Cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction | 26 |
| Chagas disease | 15 | Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) | 19 | Jak-STAT signaling pathway | 16 |
| Amoebiasis | 13 | Regulation of actin cytoskeleton | 17 | Systemic lupus erythematosus | 13 |
| Leishmaniasis | 12 | Protein processing in endoplasmic reticulum | 13 | T cell receptor signaling pathway | 13 |
| Viral myocarditis | 8 | Endocytosis | 12 | Phagosome | 12 |
| Staphylococcus aureus infection | 7 | Phagosome | 12 | Allograft rejection | 11 |
| Epithelial cell signaling in Helicobacter pylori infection | 6 | Gap junction | 11 | Hematopoietic cell lineage | 11 |
| Malaria | 6 | Tight junction | 11 | Antigen processing and presentation | 10 |
| Tryptophan metabolism | 6 | Adherens junction | 6 | Fc epsilon RI signaling pathway | 10 |
| NOD-like receptor signaling pathway | 4 | ECM-receptor interaction | 6 | Apoptosis | 10 |
| Vibrio cholerae infection | 4 | Oocyte meiosis | 5 | Graft-versus-host disease | 9 |
| Bacterial invasion of epithelial cells | 3 | SNARE interactions in vesicular transport | 4 | Autoimmune thyroid disease | 8 |
| E.coli infection | 3 | Chemokine signaling pathway | 8 | ||
| RIG-I-like receptor signaling pathway | 3 | Basal transcription factors | 3 | Leukocyte transendothelial migration | 8 |
| Cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway | 2 | Spliceosome | 2 | Natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicity | 8 |
| Shigellosis | 2 | Aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis | 1 | Adipocytokine signaling pathway | 7 |
| Base excision repair | 1 | Asthma | 7 | ||
| RNA degradation | 1 | Intestinal IgA production | 5 | ||
| Toll-like receptor signaling pathway | 5 | ||||
| Complement and coagulation cascades | 4 | ||||
| B cell receptor signaling pathway | 3 | ||||
| TGF-beta signaling pathway | 3 | ||||
| Lysosome | 2 | ||||
| Regulation of autophagy | 2 | ||||
| Fc gamma R-mediated phagocytosis | 1 | ||||
| Primary immunodeficiency | 1 | ||||
Human homologues of Norwalk virus proteins.
| Dopamine metabolisers | Amine transporters | Others |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|