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Interplay between activation of endogenous retroviruses and inflammation as common pathogenic mechanism in neurological and psychiatric disorders

Joel Gruchot, Felisa Herrero, Ulrike Weber‐Stadlbauer, Urs Meyer, Patrick Küry

2022Brain Behavior and Immunity45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are ancestorial retroviral elements that were integrated into our genome through germline infections and insertions during evolution. They have repeatedly been implicated in the aetiology and pathophysiology of numerous human disorders, particularly in those that affect the central nervous system. In addition to the known association of ERVs with multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a growing number of studies links the induction and expression of these retroviral elements with the onset and severity of neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders. Although these disorders differ in terms of overall disease pathology and causalities, a certain degree of (subclinical) chronic inflammation can be identified in all of them. Based on these commonalities, we discuss the bidirectional relationship between ERV expression and inflammation and highlight that numerous entry points to this reciprocal sequence of events exist, including initial infections with ERV-activating pathogens, exposure to non-infectious inflammatory stimuli, and conditions in which epigenetic silencing of ERV elements is disrupted.

Topics & Concepts

Endogenous retrovirusAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisEpigeneticsInflammationMechanism (biology)DiseaseSubclinical infectionGermlineBiologyImmunologyMultiple sclerosisMedicineGeneticsVirologyGenomeGenePathologyEpistemologyPhilosophyChromosomal and Genetic VariationsParasites and Host InteractionsLysosomal Storage Disorders Research
Interplay between activation of endogenous retroviruses and inflammation as common pathogenic mechanism in neurological and psychiatric disorders | Litcius