| Literature DB >> 23029292 |
Shiri Stempler1, Eytan Ruppin.
Abstract
Alterations in gene expression resulting from Alzheimer's disease have received considerable attention in recent years. Although expression has been investigated separately in whole brain tissue, in astrocytes and in neurons, a rigorous comparative study quantifying the relative utility of these sources in predicting the progression of Alzheimer's disease has been lacking. Here we analyze gene expression from neurons, astrocytes and whole tissues across different brain regions, and compare their ability to predict Alzheimer's disease progression by building pertaining classification models based on gene expression sets annotated to different biological processes. Remarkably, we find that predictions based on neuronal gene expression are significantly more accurate than those based on astrocyte or whole tissue expression. The findings explicate the central role of neurons, particularly as compared to glial cells, in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease, and emphasize the importance of measuring gene expression in the most relevant (pathogenically 'proximal') single cell types.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23029292 PMCID: PMC3461041 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045879
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The list of GO terms used in the current study and the number of genes annotated to each process.
| GO term | Number of genes |
| Biological adhesion | 670 |
| Biological regulation | 8239 |
| Developmental process | 3295 |
| Immune system process | 1064 |
| Localization | 236 |
| Metabolic process | 7803 |
| Multicellular organismal process | 3028 |
| Response to stimulus | 5551 |
Datasets used for generating the classification models.
| Reference | Classes in the model | Number of samples | Tissue/cell type | Brain region | Dataset |
|
| Control, AD | 364 | Whole tissue | Cortex (mostly temporal) | GSE15222 |
|
| Control, NDAD | 29 | Neurons | Entorhinal cortex | GSE5281 |
|
| Early AD, advanced AD | 18 | Astrocytes | Temporal cortex | GSE29652 |
|
| Control, incipient AD, advanced AD | 31 | Whole tissue | Hippocampus | GSE1297 |
|
| Control, NDAD | 29 | Neurons | Hippocampus | GSE5281 |
NDAD are non-demented individuals with intermediate AD neuropathology.
Figure 1Mean accuracies of predictions of AD severity obtained from various classification models.
Each bar represents the mean accuracy of 20 classification models built using cross-validation based on cortex (A) neuronal (control, NDAD and AD samples), (B) astrocytes (early and advanced AD samples) and (C) whole tissue (control and AD samples) and on hippocampus (D) neuronal (control, NDAD and AD samples) and (E) whole tissue (control and AD samples) gene expression data, using all available genes (leftmost columns) or genes from specific biological processes. Standard deviations (SD) are shown as error bars. Two classifiers results are presented for each case: one classifier using all genes annotated to that biological process, and another classifier that imposes an additional feature selection for only top selected genes (see Methods).