Prefrontal Cortex Transcriptomic Deconvolution Implicates Monocyte Infiltration in Parkinson's Disease

Neurodegener Dis. 2020;20(2-3):110-112. doi: 10.1159/000510218. Epub 2020 Sep 25.

Abstract

Introduction: Although not considered a primary cause, neuroinflammation is associated with many neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinson's disease (PD).

Methods: To elucidate potential immune involvement in PD, the present study imputed immune cell abundances from bulk RNA-sequencing transcriptomic data of PD postmortem prefrontal cortices. CIBERSORTx, an RNA deconvolution algorithm that implements support vector regression, was used to measure the relative abundances of immune cells from a previously published gene expression dataset. Through this machine-learning approach, relative proportions of 22 immune cell subtypes present in the original brain tissue were estimated.

Results: Prefrontal cortices from PD patients exhibited significantly higher relative abundances of monocytes compared to neuropathologically normal controls (p value = 0.0005). The relative proportions of the other 21 immune subtypes showed no significant differences between control and PD samples.

Conclusion and discussion: The findings corroborate previous reports and suggest monocytes may be involved in PD pathogenesis.

Keywords: Monocytes; Neuroinflammation; Parkinson’s disease; Transcriptome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Monocytes / immunology*
  • Parkinson Disease / immunology*
  • Prefrontal Cortex / immunology*
  • Transcriptome / immunology*