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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Jiao, Liyuana; 1 | Jing, Ziyea; 1 | Zhang, Wenjiea | Su, Xuesena | Yan, Hualeia | Tian, Shouyuanb; *
Affiliations: [a] Department of Anesthesiology, First Hospital of Shanxi Medical University, Taiyuan, China | [b] Shanxi Province Cancer Hospital/Shanxi Hospital Affiliated to Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Taiyuan, China
Correspondence: [*] Correspondence to: Shouyuan Tian, Shanxi Province Cancer Hospital/Shanxi Hospital Affiliated to Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Taiyuan, 030013, China. E-mail: chinatsyjj@sxmu.edu.cn.
Note: [1] These authors contributed equally to this work.
Abstract: Background:Previous reports have demonstrated post-operative dementia and Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and increased amyloid-β levels and tau hyperphosphorylation have been observed in animal models post-anesthesia. Objective:After surgical interventions, loss in memory has been observed that has been found linked with genes modulated after anesthesia. Present study aimed to study molecular pattern present in genes modulated post anesthesia and involved in characters progressing towards AD. Methods:In the present study, 17 transcript variants belonging to eight genes, which have been found to modulate post-anesthesia and contribute to AD progression, were envisaged for their compositional features, molecular patterns, and codon and codon context-associated studies. Results:The sequences’ composition was G/C rich, influencing dinucleotide preference, codon preference, codon usage, and codon context. The G/C nucleotides being highly occurring nucleotides, CpGdinucleotides were also preferred; however, CpG was highly disfavored at p3-1 at the codon junction. The nucleotide composition of Cytosine exhibited a unique feature, and unlike other nucleotides, it did not correlate with codon bias. Contrarily, it correlated with the sequence lengths. The sequences were leucine-rich, and multiple leucine repeats were present, exhibiting the functional role of neuroprotection from neuroinflammation post-anesthesia. Conclusions:The analysis pave the way to elucidate unique molecular patterns in genes modulated during anesthetic treatment and might help ameliorate the ill effects of anesthetics in the future.
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease, anesthesia, CpG overrepresentation, codon context, gene modulation, tau aggregation
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-231142
Journal: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, vol. 97, no. 4, pp. 1645-1660, 2024
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