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Susceptibility genes are enriched in those of the herpes simplex virus 1/host interactome in psychiatric and neurological disorders
Author(s) -
Carter Chris J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pathogens and disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.983
H-Index - 105
ISSN - 2049-632X
DOI - 10.1111/2049-632x.12077
Subject(s) - interactome , disease , gene , biology , multiple sclerosis , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , bipolar disorder , genetics , immunology , medicine , psychiatry , neuroscience , cognition , pathology
Abstract Herpes simplex virus 1 ( HSV ‐1) can promote beta‐amyloid deposition and tau phosphorylation, demyelination or cognitive deficits relevant to A lzheimer's disease or multiple sclerosis and to many neuropsychiatric disorders with which it has been implicated. A seroprevalence much higher than disease incidence has called into question any primary causal role. However, as also the case with risk‐promoting polymorphisms (also present in control populations), any causal effects are likely to be conditional. During its life cycle, the virus binds to many proteins and modifies the expression of multiple genes creating a host/pathogen interactome involving 1347 host genes. This data set is heavily enriched in the susceptibility genes for multiple sclerosis ( P  = 1.3E−99) >  A lzheimer's disease > schizophrenia >  P arkinsonism > depression > bipolar disorder > childhood obesity > chronic fatigue > autism > and anorexia ( P  = 0.047) but not attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, a relationship maintained for genome‐wide association study data sets in multiple sclerosis and A lzheimer's disease. Overlapping susceptibility gene/interactome data sets disrupt signalling networks relevant to each disease, suggesting that disease susceptibility genes may filter the attentions of the pathogen towards particular pathways and pathologies. In this way, the same pathogen could contribute to multiple diseases in a gene‐dependent manner and condition the risk‐promoting effects of the genes whose function it disrupts.

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