Yeh Fan-Chi, Kao Chung-Feng, Kuo Po-Hsiu
Department of Public Health & Institute of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, College of Public Health, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Department of Public Health & Institute of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, College of Public Health, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan; Research Center for Genes, Environment and Human Health, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2015 Jun 19;10(6):e0128605. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128605. eCollection 2015.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays important roles in neuronal survival and differentiation; however, the effects of BDNF on mood disorders remain unclear. We investigated BDNF from the perspective of various aspects of systems biology, including its molecular evolution, genomic studies, protein functions, and pathway analysis.
We conducted analyses examining sequences, multiple alignments, phylogenetic trees and positive selection across 12 species and several human populations. We summarized the results of previous genomic and functional studies of pro-BDNF and mature-BDNF (m-BDNF) found in a literature review. We identified proteins that interact with BDNF and performed pathway-based analysis using large genome-wide association (GWA) datasets obtained for mood disorders.
BDNF is encoded by a highly conserved gene. The chordate BDNF genes exhibit an average of 75% identity with the human gene, while vertebrate orthologues are 85.9%-100% identical to human BDNF. No signs of recent positive selection were found. Associations between BDNF and mood disorders were not significant in most of the genomic studies (e.g., linkage, association, gene expression, GWA), while relationships between serum/plasma BDNF level and mood disorders were consistently reported. Pro-BDNF is important in the response to stress; the literature review suggests the necessity of studying both pro- and m-BDNF with regard to mood disorders. In addition to conventional pathway analysis, we further considered proteins that interact with BDNF (I-Genes) and identified several biological pathways involved with BDNF or I-Genes to be significantly associated with mood disorders.
Systematically examining the features and biological pathways of BDNF may provide opportunities to deepen our understanding of the mechanisms underlying mood disorders.
脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)在神经元存活和分化中发挥重要作用;然而,BDNF对情绪障碍的影响仍不清楚。我们从系统生物学的各个方面对BDNF进行了研究,包括其分子进化、基因组研究、蛋白质功能和通路分析。
我们对12个物种和几个人类群体进行了序列分析、多重比对、系统发育树构建和正选择分析。我们总结了文献综述中先前对前体BDNF和成熟BDNF(m-BDNF)的基因组和功能研究结果。我们鉴定了与BDNF相互作用的蛋白质,并使用为情绪障碍获得的大型全基因组关联(GWA)数据集进行基于通路的分析。
BDNF由一个高度保守的基因编码。脊索动物的BDNF基因与人类基因的平均同一性为75%,而脊椎动物的直系同源基因与人类BDNF的同一性为85.9%-100%。未发现近期正选择的迹象。在大多数基因组研究(如连锁、关联、基因表达、GWA)中,BDNF与情绪障碍之间的关联不显著,而血清/血浆BDNF水平与情绪障碍之间的关系则一直被报道。前体BDNF在应激反应中很重要;文献综述表明,在情绪障碍方面研究前体BDNF和m-BDNF都有必要。除了传统的通路分析,我们还进一步考虑了与BDNF相互作用的蛋白质(I-基因),并确定了几个与BDNF或I-基因相关的生物通路与情绪障碍显著相关。
系统地研究BDNF的特征和生物通路可能为深化我们对情绪障碍潜在机制的理解提供机会。