| Literature DB >> 32714585 |
Laura K Olsen1, Eilis Dowd1, Declan P McKernan1.
Abstract
Despite over 200 years since its first description by James Parkinson, the cause(s) of most cases of Parkinson's disease (PD) are yet to be elucidated. The disparity between the current understanding of PD symptomology and pathology has led to numerous symptomatic therapies, but no strategy for prevention or disease cure. An association between certain viral infections and neurodegenerative diseases has been recognized, but largely ignored or dismissed as controversial, for decades. Recent epidemiological studies have renewed scientific interest in investigating microbial interactions with the central nervous system (CNS). This review examines past and current clinical findings and overviews the potential molecular implications of viruses in PD pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinsons disease; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; viral infection
Year: 2018 PMID: 32714585 PMCID: PMC7373231 DOI: 10.1042/NS20170166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuronal Signal ISSN: 2059-6553
Viral infection associations with PD
| Viral infection | Relation to PD | Study |
|---|---|---|
| ↑ incidence (HSV-I) | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear dsDNA genome (152–154 kb) | ↑ incidence | [ |
| -Causes blistering of mouth/genitals, latency in neurones | ↑ incidence (HSV-I) | [ |
| No association | [ | |
| ↑ incidence | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear ssRNA(–) genome (13.5 kb) | ↑ incidence | [ |
| -Causes fever, cough, runny nose, malaise | No association | [ |
| ↓ incidence | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear ssRNA(–) genome (15–16 kb) | No association | [ |
| -Causes rash, white spots, cough, red eyes | No association | [ |
| ↓ incidence | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear dsDNA genome (~200 kb) | No association | [ |
| -May cause mononucleosis, pnuemonia | No association | [ |
| No association | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear ssRNA(+) genome (27–32 kb) | ||
| -Causes upper/lower respiratory infection, sometimes gastroenteritis | ||
| ↑ incidence | [ | |
| -Enveloped, linear ssRNA(–) genome (15 kb) | ||
| -Causes parotid gland swelling, malaise |
Viral induced molecular/cellular changes related to PD pathology
| Theme | Condition | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| PD | HSV-I | Influenza A | |
| Activated microglia and astrogliosis in PD midbrain [ | ↑ microglia in HSV-I infected ependymal [ | H1N1 ↑ astrogliosis and activated microglia in SN and VTA [ | |
| T-cell modulation and recognition of α-synuclein epitopes in PD [ | Exhausted T cells in HSV-I infected brain stem and TG express HSV-I epitope [ | H5N1 causes excessive peripheral T-cell activation [ | |
| ↑ CSF and peripheral cytokines in PD [ | T-cell associated cytokines ↑ in HSV-infected TG [ | H5N1 ↑ astrocyte/neuronal cytokines [ | |
| Autophagic and lysosomal defects in PD neurones [ | PKR inhibition disrupts autophagy/autophagosome formation [ | PKR inhibition and autophagosome/lysosome fusion blocked [ | |
| Redistribution of synaptic proteins in PD models [ | ↓ synapsin-1 and synaptophysin in murine cortical neurones [ | H5N1 inhibits PSD-95; SNAP25 differentially expressed in neonatal infection [ | |
| ↓ synaptic connectivity and glutamatergic synapse loss in PD models [ | Reduced NMDAR and synaptic activity in HSE patients [ | ↓ neuronal excitatory synaptic activity and amplitude [ | |
As detailed above, multiple parallels can be drawn between PD pathology and the potential molecular and cellular consequences of HSV-I/influenza A infection. Abbreviations: NMDAR, N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor; PKR, protein kinase R; PSD-95, post-synaptic density protein-95; SNAP25, synaptosomal-associated protein 25; VTA, ventral tegmental area.
Figure 1HSV-I and Influenza A viral infections may lead to PD-like pathology
HSV-I and influenza A viral infections have the potential to cause molecular and cellular changes that can alter healthy neuron function within the CNS. Viral transcripts/proteins due to HSV-I/influenza A infection may cause inflammation, autophagy disruption, and synapse dysfunction, possibly contributing to a PD-like pathology.