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Bota, Patricia M, Picon-Pages, Pol, Fanlo-Ucar, Hugo, Almabhouh, Saja, Bagudanch, Oriol, Zeylan, Melisa E, Senyuz, Simge, Gohl, Patrick, Molina-Fernandez, Ruben, Fernandez-Fuentes, Narcis, Barbu, Eduard, Vicente, Raul, Nattel, Stanley, Ois, Angel, Puig-Pijoan, Albert, Garcia-Ojalvo, Jordi, Keskin, Ozlem, Gursoy, Attila, Munoz, Francisco J, Oliva, Baldomero, (2026). Oxidative stress-driven transcriptomic remodeling in human astrocytes reveals network signatures associated with neurodegenerative and cardiovascular processes Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal 31, 263-275
Astrocytes are central to brain homeostasis, supporting neuronal metabolism, synaptic activity, and the blood-brain barrier. With aging, these glial cells undergo molecular and functional changes that weaken support functions and promote neuroinflammation, contributing to neurodegeneration. Yet the systems-level mechanisms by which astrocytes respond to aging-related stressors remain poorly defined in human models. Because aging also heightens risk for cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, type 2 diabetes, and systemic inflammation, clarifying shared astrocytic pathways is critical for understanding brain-body crosstalk. Using an in vitro human astrocyte model exposed to sublethal oxidative stress (10 mu M H2O2) as a proxy for age-related cellular stress, we profiled transcriptomic changes and identified differentially expressed genes across antioxidant defenses, proteostasis, transcriptional regulation, vesicular trafficking, and inflammatory signaling. We then performed network-prioritization analyses on a curated human protein-protein interactome: one seeded with the astrocyte oxidative stress responsive genes and six with phenotype-associated gene sets (Alzheimer's disease, cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment, type 2 diabetes, oxidative stress, and inflammation). Intersecting the top 5 % scoring genes from each run yielded a 127-gene core shared across all seven, enriched for proteostasis, DNA repair, mitochondrial regulation, and telomere and nuclear envelope maintenance. Structure-guided analyses highlighted vulnerable interfaces, including lamin A/C-lamin B1, alpha-actinin-filamins, 14-3-3 dimers, and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase assemblies, where pathogenic variants are predicted to destabilize or aberrantly stabilize protein interactions. Structure-based interface predictions also highlight potential interactions between amyloid precursor protein (APP) and valosin-containing protein (VCP), and between p53 and 14-3-3 zeta, poten-tially linking proteostasis and stress signaling. Together, these analyses identify a conserved astrocyte-centered network signature that may relate neurodegenerative and cardiovascular processes, and prioritize structurally testable candidates for biomarker and intervention hypothesis testing.
JTD Keywords: 14-3-3-zeta, Aging-associated proteomic remodeling, Astrocytic vulnerability networks, Crosstalk, Disease, Dysfunction, Insights, Interactome, Interfaces, Mutations, Network-based gene-disease prioritization, Neurodegeneration-cardiovascular disease, Oxidative stress-responsive astrocyte pathways, Phosphorylation, Prediction, Proteostasis and mitochondrial dysfunction, Receptor, Structurally vulnerable proteinprotein, Structure-guided variant impact prediction, Telomere and nuclear envelope integrity, Update