Department of Computer Science, School of Information and Computer Sciences, University of California-Irvine, Irvine, CA 92617, USA.
Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics, School of Information and Computer Sciences, University of California-Irvine, Irvine, CA 92617, USA.
Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Sep 27;22(19):10387. doi: 10.3390/ijms221910387.
Almost all brain cells contain primary cilia, antennae-like microtubule sensory organelles, on their surface, which play critical roles in brain functions. During neurodevelopmental stages, cilia are essential for brain formation and maturation. In the adult brain, cilia play vital roles as signaling hubs that receive and transduce various signals and regulate cell-to-cell communications. These distinct roles suggest that cilia functions, and probably structures, change throughout the human lifespan. To further understand the age-dependent changes in cilia roles, we identified and analyzed age-dependent patterns of expression of cilia's structural and functional components across the human lifespan. We acquired cilia transcriptomic data for 16 brain regions from the BrainSpan Atlas and analyzed the age-dependent expression patterns using a linear regression model by calculating the regression coefficient. We found that 67% of cilia transcripts were differentially expressed genes with age (DEGAs) in at least one brain region. The age-dependent expression was region-specific, with the highest and lowest numbers of DEGAs expressed in the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, respectively. The majority of cilia DEGAs displayed upregulation with age in most of the brain regions. The transcripts encoding cilia basal body components formed the majority of cilia DEGAs, and adjacent cerebral cortices exhibited large overlapping pairs of cilia DEGAs. Most remarkably, specific α/β-tubulin subunits (, , and and exhibited the highest rates of downregulation and upregulation, respectively, across age in almost all brain regions. α/β-tubulins and expressions are known to be dysregulated in age-related neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders. Our results support a role for the high dynamics of cilia structural and functional components across the lifespan in the normal physiology of brain circuits. Furthermore, they suggest a crucial role for cilia signaling in the pathophysiological mechanisms of age-related psychiatric/neurological disorders.
几乎所有脑细胞的表面都有初级纤毛,这是一种类似天线的微管感觉细胞器,在大脑功能中起着关键作用。在神经发育阶段,纤毛对于大脑的形成和成熟至关重要。在成年大脑中,纤毛作为信号枢纽发挥着重要作用,接收和转导各种信号,并调节细胞间的通讯。这些独特的作用表明,纤毛的功能(可能还有结构)在人类整个生命周期中都在发生变化。为了进一步了解纤毛功能随年龄变化的情况,我们鉴定并分析了人类整个生命周期中纤毛结构和功能成分的年龄依赖性表达模式。我们从 BrainSpan 图谱中获取了 16 个大脑区域的纤毛转录组数据,并使用线性回归模型通过计算回归系数来分析年龄依赖性表达模式。我们发现,在至少一个大脑区域中,有 67%的纤毛转录本是随年龄变化的差异表达基因(DEGAs)。年龄依赖性表达具有区域特异性,在腹外侧前额叶皮层和海马体中表达的 DEGAs 数量最多和最少。在大多数大脑区域中,大多数纤毛 DEGAs 随着年龄的增长而上调。编码纤毛基体组件的转录本构成了大多数纤毛 DEGAs,相邻的大脑皮层表现出大量重叠的纤毛 DEGAs 对。最值得注意的是,特定的α/β-微管蛋白亚基(、、和 以及 )在几乎所有大脑区域中都表现出最高的下调和上调率。α/β-微管蛋白和 的表达在与年龄相关的神经发育和神经退行性疾病中被认为是失调的。我们的研究结果支持纤毛结构和功能成分在整个生命周期中的高动态性在大脑回路的正常生理学中发挥作用。此外,它们表明纤毛信号在与年龄相关的精神/神经障碍的病理生理机制中起着至关重要的作用。