In Vitro Analysis of Biological Activity of Circulating Cell-Free DNA Isolated from Blood Plasma of Schizophrenic Patients and Healthy Controls.
Elizaveta S ErshovaGalina V ShmarinaLev N PorokhovnikNatalia V ZakharovaGeorgiy P KostyukPavel E UmriukhinSergey I KutsevVasilina A SergeevaNatalia N VeikoSvetlana V KostyukPublished in: Genes (2022)
Schizophrenia is associated with low-grade systemic inflammation. Circulating cell-free DNA (c-cfDNA) belongs to the DAMP class. The major research question was: can the c-cfDNA of schizophrenic patients (sz-cfDNA) stimulate the DNA sensor genes, which control the innate immunity? We investigated the in vitro response of ten human skin fibroblast (HSF) lines to five DNA probes containing different amounts of a GC-rich marker (the ribosomal repeat) and a DNA oxidation marker (8-oxodG) including sz-cfDNA and healthy control c-cfDNA (hc-cfDNA) probes. After 1 h, 3 h, and 24 h of incubation, the expression of 6 protein genes responsible for cfDNA transport into the cell (EEA1 and HMGB1) and the recognition of cytosolic DNA (TLR9, AIM2, STING and RIG-I) was analyzed at the transcriptional (RT-qPCR) and protein level (flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy). Additionally, we analyzed changes in the RNA amount of 32 genes (RT-qPCR), which had been previously associated with different cellular responses to cell-free DNA with different characteristics. Adding sz-cfDNA and hc-cfDNA to the HSF medium in equal amounts (50 ng/mL) blocked endocytosis and stimulated TLR9 and STING gene expression while blocking RIG-I and AIM2 expression. Sz-cfDNA and hc-cfDNA, compared to gDNA, demonstrated much stronger stimulated transcription of genes that control cell proliferation, cytokine synthesis, apoptosis, autophagy, and mitochondrial biogenesis. No significant difference was observed in the response of the cells to sz-cfDNA and hc-cfDNA. Sz-cfDNA and hc-cfDNA showed similarly high biological activity towards HSFs, stimulating the gene activity of TLR9 and STING DNA sensor proteins and blocking the activity of the AIM2 protein gene. Since the sz-cfDNA content in the patients' blood is several times higher than the hc-cfDNA content, sz-cfDNA may upregulate pro-inflammatory cytokines in schizophrenia.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- end stage renal disease
- single molecule
- ejection fraction
- genome wide
- cell proliferation
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- oxidative stress
- small molecule
- poor prognosis
- circulating tumor
- dna methylation
- bipolar disorder
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- peritoneal dialysis
- flow cytometry
- cell death
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- nucleic acid
- transcription factor
- nitric oxide
- high resolution
- hydrogen peroxide
- high grade
- cell therapy
- signaling pathway
- heat shock
- heat stress