Genetics: PRDX6

Hoopoe

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
One of the candidate genes in the DecodeME preprint.
PRDX6 (Tier 1)
• Protein: Peroxiredoxin 6. UniProt. GeneCards. The allele that increases the risk of ME/CFS is
associated with decreasing PRDX6 gene expression.
• Molecular function: Thiol-specific peroxidase that catalyses the reduction of hydrogen
peroxide and organic hydroperoxides. PRDX6 also has phospholipase A2 activity (18) and acts
in antioxidant defence by facilitating repair of damaged cell membranes via reduction of
peroxidised phospholipids (19).
• Cellular function: PRDX6 protects against oxidative stress (20). Cytoplasmic enzyme involved
in phosphatidylcholine synthesis and repair of membrane lipid peroxidation. PRDX6 is not
peroxisomal.
• Link to disease: No genetic diseases known.
• Potential relevance to ME/CFS: Phosphatidylcholine has been reported to be depleted in a
group of people with ME/CFS (21). One study showed increased plasma peroxides in ME/CFS

Curcumin increases PRDX6 expression.
 
Peroxiredoxin 6 (Prdx6), a unique 1-Cys member of the peroxiredoxin family, exhibits peroxidase activity, phospholipase activity, and lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (LPCAT) activity. Prdx6 has been known to be an important enzyme for the maintenance of lipid peroxidation repair, cellular metabolism, inflammatory signaling, and antioxidant damage. Growing research has demonstrated that the altered activity of this enzyme is linked with various pathological processes including central nervous system (CNS) disorders. This review discusses the distinctive structure, enzyme activity, and function of Prdx6 in different CNS disorders, as well as emphasizing the significance of Prdx6 in neurological disorders.
 
Downregulated in LC here:

Molecular Insights into Long COVID: Plasma Proteomics Reveals Oxidative Stress, Coagulation Cascade Activation, and Glycolytic Imbalance
Sheela Ramanathan; Mohammad Mobarak Hussain Chowdhury; Akouavi Julite Irmin Quenum; Christine Rioux-Perreault; Jean-Francois Lucier; Subburaj Ilangumaran; Hugues Allard-Chamard; Alain Piche

Persistent symptoms following SARS-CoV-2 infection are the hallmark of post-COVID condition (PCC), also referred to as long COVID. However, our knowledge is limited on the underlying molecular mechanisms.

In this study, we performed data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry plasma proteomics (DIA-MS) to identify molecular alterations associated with PCC. DIA-MS proteomic analysis revealed a few proteins linked to oxidative stress that had altered expression.

Notably, PCC samples exhibited downregulation of the antioxidant protein peroxiredoxin 6 (PRDX6) and upregulation of oxidative stress-associated proteins particularly vanin-1 (VNN1) and paraoxonase-3 (PON3). Additionally, the PCC group showed significantly higher levels of six proteins (PCSK9, CST3, C1Q, CPB2, KNG1 GAPDH), which were linked to pathways involving glycolysis, complement and coagulation cascades, and inflammation.

Oxidative stress analysis confirmed that PCC samples had significantly higher levels of DNA damage (8-OHdG) than the convalescent group, whereas antioxidant markers, such as reduced and oxidized glutathione (GSH and GSSG), were significantly lower in PCC samples than in uninfected controls. Our observations point towards ongoing oxidative and inflammatory processes in PCC and suggest potential targets for biomarker development and therapeutic intervention.

Web | PDF | Preprint:

Strangely higher 15 mins after exercise in this small Hanson study:

Genecards links for easy perusal, sorry I lost the nice colour coding and not all have directly associated genes, I haven’t checked them all individually yet, just generated the URLs

 
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