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Y染色体缺失对帕金森病风险及病情进展的影响。

Impact of Y chromosome loss on the risk of Parkinson's disease and progression.

作者信息

Wang Junhao, Chen Xinyi, Du Wenxuan, Lin Cha, Liao Yu, Corvol Jean-Christophe, Maple-Grødem Jodi, Campbell Meghan C, Elbaz Alexis, Lesage Suzanne, Brice Alexis, Schwarzschild Michael A, Taba Pille, Kõks Sulev, Alves Guido, Tysnes Ole-Bjørn, Perlmutter Joel S, Maiti Baijayanta, van Hilten Jacobus J, Barker Roger A, Williams-Gray Caroline H, Scherzer Clemens R, Liu Ganqiang

机构信息

Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Systems Medicine in Inflammatory Diseases, School of Medicine, Shenzhen Campus of Sun Yat-sen University, No. 66, Gongchang Road, Guangming District, Shenzhen, Guangdong, 518107, China; Neurobiology Research Center, School of Medicine, Shenzhen Campus of Sun Yat-sen University, No. 66, Gongchang Road, Shenzhen, Guangdong, 518107, China.

Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, Département de Neurologie et de Génétique, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, F-75013, Paris, France.

出版信息

EBioMedicine. 2025 May 29;117:105769. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2025.105769.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Loss of Y chromosome (LOY), an age-related somatic mutation, is associated with various age-related diseases, but its role in the onset and progression of Parkinson's disease (PD) remains unclear. This study investigated the relationship between blood LOY levels and the risk of PD onset and progression.

METHODS

We estimated the LOY level for each male participant based on genome-wide arrays or whole genome sequencing data. We performed Cox proportional hazards regression analysis among 222,598 male participants in the UK Biobank and linear mixed model analysis involving 2574 male individuals with PD across 14 cohorts, encompassing 19,562 visits. In the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) cohort, we further compared brain structure using T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, and carried out brain network functional connectivity analysis based on resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) datasets. Additionally, we assessed the LOY status in single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) data, which included 1,303,531 cells from 279 post-mortem samples across five brain regions, and performed temporal dynamic gene expression analysis.

FINDINGS

Male participants with LOY had a slightly higher risk of developing PD during follow-up (HR = 1·16, 95% CI = 1·01-1·34, P = 0·04). Among males affected by PD, LOY carriers experienced accelerated neurodegenerative progression, manifesting as more rapid motor impairment (P = 0·0072) and cognitive decline (P = 0·0005) compared to non-LOY carriers. Patients with PD carrying LOY also exhibited decreased network functional connectivity in certain brain regions. Notably, LOY cells were particularly enriched in microglia/immune and vascular/epithelial cells, and a subset of genes in LOY-Mic P2RY12 cells were associated with PD progression.

INTERPRETATION

This data-driven study highlights the potential association of LOY with the onset and progression of PD through the analysis of multi-scale data, including clinical phenotypes, brain neuroimaging maps, and molecular profiles from single-nucleus transcriptome across multi-brain regions. These findings suggest that LOY may be an accomplice to the onset and progression of PD.

FUNDING

G.L.'s work is supported by the Shenzhen Fundamental Research Program (JCYJ20240813151132042), National Natural Science Foundation of China (32270701, 32470708), Young Talent Recruitment Project of Guangdong (2019QN01Y139), the Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province (2023B1212060018) and Shenzhen Key Laboratory for Systems Medicine in Inflammatory Diseases (ZDSYS20220606100803007). This study is supported by High-performance Computing Public Platform (Shenzhen Campus) of Sun Yat-sen University. C.R.S.'s work is supported by NIH grants NINDS/NIA R01NS115144, the U.S. Department of Defense, and the American Parkinson Disease Association Center for Advanced Parkinson Research. C.R.S.'s research work was funded in part by Aligning Science Across Parkinson's 000301 through the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research (MJFF). The study was made possible in part by a philanthropic support for Illumina MEGA chip genotyping (to Brigham & Women's Hospital and C.R.S.). CHWG received funding support from an RCUK/UKRI Research Innovation Fellowship awarded by the Medical Research Council (MR/R007446/1; MR/W029235/1) and from the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR203312). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to all Author Accepted Manuscripts arising from this submission.

摘要

背景

Y染色体缺失(LOY)是一种与年龄相关的体细胞突变,与多种年龄相关疾病有关,但其在帕金森病(PD)发病和进展中的作用尚不清楚。本研究调查了血液中LOY水平与PD发病及进展风险之间的关系。

方法

我们根据全基因组阵列或全基因组测序数据估算了每位男性参与者的LOY水平。我们在英国生物银行的222,598名男性参与者中进行了Cox比例风险回归分析,并在涉及14个队列中2574名患有PD的男性个体(共19,562次就诊)中进行了线性混合模型分析。在帕金森病进展标志物倡议(PPMI)队列中,我们使用T1加权磁共振成像(MRI)扫描进一步比较了脑结构,并基于静息态功能MRI(rs-fMRI)数据集进行了脑网络功能连接分析。此外,我们评估了单核RNA测序(snRNA-seq)数据中的LOY状态,该数据包括来自五个脑区279个尸检样本的1,303,531个细胞,并进行了时间动态基因表达分析。

研究结果

LOY男性参与者在随访期间患PD的风险略高(HR = 1·16,95% CI = 1·01 - 1·34,P = 0·04)。在受PD影响的男性中,与非LOY携带者相比,LOY携带者经历了加速的神经退行性进展,表现为更快速的运动功能障碍(P = 0·0072)和认知衰退(P = 0·0005)。携带LOY的PD患者在某些脑区的网络功能连接也有所下降。值得注意的是,LOY细胞在小胶质细胞/免疫细胞和血管/上皮细胞中特别富集,并且LOY-Mic P2RY12细胞中的一部分基因与PD进展相关。

解读

这项数据驱动的研究通过分析多尺度数据,包括临床表型、脑神经影像图谱和来自多个脑区的单核转录组分子谱,突出了LOY与PD发病和进展的潜在关联。这些发现表明LOY可能是PD发病和进展的帮凶。

资金支持

G.L.的工作得到了深圳市基础研究计划(JCYJ20240813151132042)、中国国家自然科学基金(32270701、32470708)、广东省青年人才引进项目(2019QN01Y139)、广东省科技计划项目(2023B1212060018)以及深圳市炎症性疾病系统医学重点实验室(ZDSYS20220606100803007)的支持。本研究得到了中山大学深圳校区高性能计算公共平台的支持。C.R.S.的工作得到了美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)授予的NINDS/NIA R01NS115144、美国国防部以及美国帕金森病协会高级帕金森研究中心(American Parkinson Disease Association Center for Advanced Parkinson Research)的资助。C.R.S.的研究工作部分由迈克尔·J·福克斯帕金森研究基金会(Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research)通过帕金森病科学联盟(Aligning Science Across Parkinson's 000301)资助。本研究部分得益于对Illumina MEGA芯片基因分型的慈善支持(给予布莱根妇女医院和C.R.S.)。CHWG获得了医学研究理事会(Medical Research Council)授予的RCUK/UKRI研究创新奖学金(MR/R007446/1;MR/W029x35/1)以及NIHR剑桥生物医学研究中心(NIHR203312)的资金支持。所表达的观点是作者的观点,不一定是NIHR或卫生与社会保健部的观点。为了实现开放获取,作者已将CC BY公共版权许可应用于本次提交产生的所有作者接受稿件。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/3f1b/12159889/fd8563de1868/gr1.jpg

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