Skip to main content

Málstofa Lífvísindaseturs - Serum protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease

Málstofa Lífvísindaseturs - Serum protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease - á vefsíðu Háskóla Íslands
Hvenær 
10. október 2024 12:00 til 13:00
Hvar 

Árnagarður

stofa 201

Nánar 
Aðgangur ókeypis

Málstofa Lífvísindasetur fimmtudaginn 10. október kl. 12:00 í Árnagarði, stofu 201

Fyrirlesari: Dr. Valborg Guðmundsdóttir, rannsóknasérfræðingur við Heilbrigðisvísindastofnun Háskóla Íslands og Hjartavernd

Titill: Serum proteomics reveal APOE-ε4-dependent and APOE-ε4-independent protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease

Ágrip: A deeper understanding of the molecular processes underlying late-onset Alzheimer’s disease (LOAD) could aid in biomarker and drug target discovery. Using high-throughput serum proteomics in the prospective population-based Age, Gene/Environment Susceptibility–Reykjavik Study (AGES) cohort of 5,127 older Icelandic adults (mean age, 76.6 ± 5.6 years), we identified 303 proteins associated with incident LOAD over a median follow-up of 12.8 years. Over 40% of these proteins were associated with LOAD independently of APOE-ε4 carrier status, were implicated in neuronal processes and overlapped with LOAD protein signatures in brain and cerebrospinal fluid. We identified 17 proteins whose associations with LOAD were strongly dependent on APOE-ε4 carrier status, with mostly consistent associations in cerebrospinal fluid. Remarkably, four of these proteins (TBCA, ARL2, S100A13 and IRF6) were downregulated by APOE-ε4 yet upregulated due to LOAD, a finding replicated in external cohorts and possibly reflecting a response to disease onset. These findings highlight dysregulated pathways at the preclinical stages of LOAD, including those both independent of and dependent on APOE-ε4 status.

Speaker: Dr. Valborg Guðmundsdóttir, research specialist at Health Science Institution, University of Iceland and the Icelandic Heart Association

Málstofa Lífvísindaseturs - APOE serum protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease