Department of Neurology, China-Japan Union Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, 130033, China.
Sci Rep. 2024 Feb 2;14(1):2783. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-53287-7.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with extensive involvement of motor symptoms, imposing a heavy economic burden on patients and society. B lymphocytes, a group of immune cells associated with humoral immunity, have been shown to be involved in the pathogenesis of PD. However, the causal relationship and potential pathogenic effects of B cell in PD remain unclear. Based on the three core hypotheses of the Mendelian randomization (MR) study, we explored causal associations between 190 B-cell immunological traits and 482,730 European individuals (Ncase = 33,674, Ncontrol = 449,056) from genome wide association studies by means of the two-sample bidirectional MR method. The inverse‑variance weighted method was selected as the main approach when conducting MR analysis. Finally, the results were verified by the heterogeneity and horizontal pleiotropy analyses. Five B-cell immunological phenotypes were nominally associated with PD at the significance threshold of P < 0.05. Concretely, IgD + CD38- B cell %lymphocyte (OR 1.052, 95% CI 1.001-1.106, P = 0.046), CD20 on IgD- CD24- B cell (OR 1.060, 95% CI 1.005-1.117, P = 0.032), CD38 on IgD+ CD24- B cell (OR 1.113, 95% CI 1.028-1.206, P = 0.009), and BAFF-R on CD20- B cell (OR 1.093, 95% CI 1.010-1.184, P = 0.027) were identified as risk factors for PD. Instead, CD38 on Plasma Blast-Plasma Cell (OR 0.894, 95% CI 0.802-0.996, P = 0.043) was proved to be protective. However, there is no statistically significant correlation between B cell and PD after Bonferroni correction. The results of reverse MR were negative, avoiding the reverse causal effects. Eventually, the association results were identified as stable across several sensitivity analyses. Briefly, our study might demonstrate the key factor of B cells in PD. Further studies are warranted to clarify the associations for early identification and immunotherapeutic development in PD patients.
帕金森病(PD)是一种涉及运动症状的神经退行性疾病,给患者和社会带来了沉重的经济负担。B 淋巴细胞是一组与体液免疫相关的免疫细胞,已被证明与 PD 的发病机制有关。然而,B 细胞在 PD 中的因果关系和潜在的致病作用尚不清楚。基于 Mendelian 随机化(MR)研究的三个核心假设,我们通过两样本双向 MR 方法,利用来自全基因组关联研究的 190 个 B 细胞免疫特征和 482730 名欧洲个体(Ncase=33674,Ncontrol=449056),探索了它们之间的因果关系。当进行 MR 分析时,选择逆方差加权法作为主要方法。最后,通过异质性和水平多效性分析验证了结果。有 5 个 B 细胞免疫表型在 P<0.05 的显著水平上与 PD 相关。具体而言,IgD+CD38-B 细胞%淋巴细胞(OR 1.052,95%CI 1.001-1.106,P=0.046)、IgD-CD24-B 细胞上的 CD20(OR 1.060,95%CI 1.005-1.117,P=0.032)、IgD+CD24-B 细胞上的 CD38(OR 1.113,95%CI 1.028-1.206,P=0.009)和 CD20-B 细胞上的 BAFF-R(OR 1.093,95%CI 1.010-1.184,P=0.027)被确定为 PD 的风险因素。相反,血浆母细胞上的 CD38(OR 0.894,95%CI 0.802-0.996,P=0.043)被证明是保护性的。然而,经过 Bonferroni 校正后,B 细胞与 PD 之间没有统计学上的显著相关性。反向 MR 的结果为阴性,避免了反向因果效应。最终,关联结果在几项敏感性分析中被确定为稳定。简而言之,我们的研究可能表明 B 细胞在 PD 中的关键作用。需要进一步的研究来阐明它们之间的关联,以便在 PD 患者中进行早期识别和免疫治疗的发展。