| Literature DB >> 23113945 |
Ines Greco1, Nicola Day, Joanna Riddoch-Contreras, Jane Reed, Hilkka Soininen, Iwona Kłoszewska, Magda Tsolaki, Bruno Vellas, Christian Spenger, Patrizia Mecocci, Lars-Olof Wahlund, Andrew Simmons, Julie Barnes, Simon Lovestone.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is the most widespread form of dementia in the elderly but despite progress made in recent years towards a mechanistic understanding, there is still an urgent need for disease modification therapy and for early diagnostic tests. Substantial international efforts are being made to discover and validate biomarkers for AD using candidate analytes and various data-driven 'omics' approaches. Cerebrospinal fluid is in many ways the tissue of choice for biomarkers of brain disease but is limited by patient and clinician acceptability, and increasing attention is being paid to the search for blood-based biomarkers. The aim of this study was to use a novel in silico approach to discover a set of candidate biomarkers for AD.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23113945 PMCID: PMC3508881 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-10-217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Network map used to guide the assertion generation for an Intelligence Network relevant for the discovery of candidate biomarkers for AD. Assertions could be direct links between proteins/mRNAs and AD (and sub-types), or indirect links via gene mutations (e.g. for familial forms of AD, such as OMIM record #104300), via pathological processes (e.g. neuronal degeneration, amyloid formation, neurofibrillary tangles, hippocampal atrophy, tau deposition), or via anatomical structures (e.g. hippocampus, CA3 region, thalamus, temporal lobe). The relations (shown in blue) are examples of the vocabularies used in the assertions.
Sample vocabularies for key AD disease, pathological observations, and tissue concepts, used in the AD IN
| Alzheimer's Disease | Acute-Phase Reaction | Amygdala |
| Early Onset Alzheimer's Disease | Amyloid Deposition | Anterior Thalamic Nucleus |
| Early Onset Familial Alzheimer's Disease | Amyloid Fibril Formation | Basal Nucleus of Meynert |
| Familial Alzheimer's Disease | Amyloidosis | CA1 region |
| Incipient Alzheimer's Disease | Asymmetric Cortical Atrophy | CA2 region |
| Late Onset Alzheimer's Disease | Blood Brain Barrier Dysfunction | CA3 region |
| Late Onset Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease | Central Nervous System Inflammation | Cholinergic Neuron |
| Mid-Stage Alzheimer's Disease | Cerebral Atrophy | Diagonal Band of Broca |
| Mild-to-Moderate Alzheimer's Disease | Cholinergic Dysfunction | Entorhinal Cortex |
| Moderate Alzheimer's Disease | Corpus Callosum Atrophy | Frontal Lobe |
| Moderate-to-Severe Alzheimer's Disease | Dystrophic Neuronal Growth | Hippocampus |
| Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease | Glial Inflammation | Inferior Temporal Gyrus |
| Severe Alzheimer's Disease | Gliosis | Left Thalamus |
| | Glucose Hypometabolism | Locus Coeruleus |
| | Granulovacuolar Degeneration | Medial Temporal Cortex |
| | Hippocampal Neurodegeneration | Parahippocampal Gyrus |
| | Inflammation | Parietal Lobe |
| | Locus Coeruleus Neuronal Loss | Prefrontal Cortex |
| | Mitochondrial Failure | Septal Nucleus |
| | Nerve Degeneration | Subiculum |
| | Neuritic Plaque Formation | Substantia Innominata |
| | Neurofibrillary Degeneration | Superior Temporal Gyrus |
| | Neurofibrillary Lesion | Synapse |
| | Neurofibrillary Tangle Formation | Temporal Isocortex |
| | Neuroinflammation | Temporal Lobe |
| | Neuronal Degeneration | Thalamus |
| | Neuronal Dysfunction | |
| | Neuronal Dystrophy | |
| | Neuronal Inclusion Bodies | |
| | Neuronal Lesion | |
| | Neuronal Loss | |
| | Neuronal Necrosis | |
| | Neuronal Shrinkage | |
| | Occipital Atrophy | |
| | Oxidative Damage | |
| | Oxidative Stress | |
| | Perivascular Amyloidosis | |
| | Synapse Dysfunction | |
| | Synaptic Degeneration | |
| | Synaptic Loss | |
| | Synapse Enlargement | |
| | Tau Deposition | |
| | Tau Phosphorylation | |
| Tau-Mediated Cytotoxicity |
Data sources used for the generation of the Intelligence Network
| Alzheimer Disease & Frontotemporal Dementia Mutation Database (http://www.molgen.ua.ac.be/ADMutations/Default.cfm) | The Alzheimer Disease & Frontotemporal Dementia Mutation Database (AD&FTDMDB) aims at collecting all known mutations and non-pathogenic coding variations in the genes related to Alzheimer disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). All data were exported and loaded into Sofia, to create gene-disease assertions. |
| Diseases Database ( | The Diseases database is a cross-referenced medical dictionary of diseases, medications, symptoms, signs and investigations, which was loaded into Sofia and provided assertions linking Alzheimers disease to symptoms and signs, histopathological abnormalities, risk factors etc. |
| Gene Ontology ( | The Gene Ontology project provides an ontology of defined terms representing gene product properties. The ontology covers three domains for the gene products: cellular component, molecular function, & biological process. All of GO was processed and loaded into Sofia, and the relevant assertions were then exported into the IN. |
| Genetic Association Database ( | The Genetic Association Database is an archive of human genetic association studies of complex diseases and disorders. All the data linking genes to diseases were processed and downloaded into Sofia, and the relevant assertions were then exported into the IN. |
| Gensat Brain Atlas ( | GENSAT is a gene expression atlas of the developing and adult central nervous system of the mouse. After AD-related brain areas were identified from literature reviews, the relevant genes were exported from GENSAT, and assertions linking gene to anatomical area created and loaded into Sofia. |
| KEGG ( | KEGG (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes) is a bioinformatics resource for linking genomes to life and the environment. Pathways relevant to AD were reviewed, and relevant protein-pathway assertions were generated using Sofia. |
| NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus ( | Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) is a database repository of high throughput gene expression data and hybridization arrays, chips, microarrays. GEO was searched for AD-relevant expression data, which were downloaded from the NCBI site and loaded into Sofia. |
| OMIM ( | Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) is a database that catalogues all the known diseases with a genetic component, and if possible, links them to the relevant genes in the human genome and provides references for further research and tools for genomic analysis of a catalogued gene. All of OMIM Genemap was exported and loaded into Sofia; relevant AD records were used to create gene-disease assertions. |
| Telemakus knowledgebase ( | Telemakus Biomarkers in Alzheimer's Disease & Mild Cognitive Impairment Knowledgebase contains information from AD and MCI biomarker studies. All of the Knowledgebase was exported and loaded into Sofia as protein-disease assertions. |
| PubMed ( | PubMed is a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine that includes over 18 million citations from MEDLINE and other life science journals for biomedical articles back to the 1950s. PubMed contains a rich set of biomedical literature abstracts relevant to many areas. AD-relevant vocabularies within Sofia were used to build a "corpus" of AD-relevant abstracts, which were then used in assertion-generation processes to create disease-protein and disease-process links. |
| Full text papers and reports | Various full text reviews from journals, and reports from AD websites (Alzheimer Research Forum; |
Figure 2workflow to identify candidate AD biomarkers. The workflow shows the steps used to filter the proteins to a set of potential AD biomarkers. For each step, the number of proteins identified is shown in red.
Final set of derived proteins representing candidate biomarker of AD
| Alpha 1-antichymotrypsin | SERPINA3 | serpin peptidase inhibitor clade A, AACT, ACT |
| Amyloid beta (A4) precursor protein (protease nexin-II, Alzheimer disease amyloid protein) | APP | AD1 (Alzheimer disease), ABETA (amyloid beta A4 protein) |
| Apolipoprotein D | APOD | |
| Apolipoprotein E | apoE | AD2 (Alzheimer disease 2) |
| B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 | BCL2 | |
| Beta-site APP-Cleaving Enzyme 1 | BACE1 | |
| Butyrylcholinesterase | BCHE | |
| C-reactive protein, pentraxin-related | CRP | |
| Choline Acetyltransferase | CHAT | CHOACTase |
| Clusterin | CLU | APOJ (Apolipoprotein J) |
| Complement component 1, q subcomponent, beta polypeptide | C1QB | |
| Estrogen Receptor 1 (alpha) | ESR1 | |
| Glial fibrillary acidic protein | GFAP | |
| Heat shock 70kD protein 5 (glucose-regulated protein) | HSPA5 | |
| Interleukin 1 beta | IL1B | |
| Interleukin 6 | IL6 | IFNB2 (Interferon beta-2) |
| Matrix Metallopeptidase 9 | MMP9 | CLG4B (92 kDa gelatinase, 92 kDa type IV collagenase) |
| Nerve Growth Factor | NGF | NGFB |
| Nitric Oxide Synthase 2A | NOS2 | NOS2A, INOS (Inducible NOS), HEP-NOS (Hepatocyte NOS) |
| PRKC, apoptosis, WT1, regulator | PAWR | PAR4 (Prostate apoptosis response 4 protein) |
| Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthase 2 | PTGS2 | PGHS2, COX2 (Cyclooxygenase 2b) |
| Transforming Growth Factor, Beta 1 | TGFB1 | |
| Transthyretin | TTR | |
| Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF superfamily, member 2) | TNF | TNFA, TNF-alfa |
| Urokinase Plasminogen Activator Receptor | PLAUR | uPAR |
Subject characteristics and PLAUR and ChAt analysis in validation study
| | | | | | | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | 82 | 58 | 72.8 (7.0) | 29 (1.1) | 1.63 (0.9) | −0.35 | <0.005 | 0.78 (0.3) | 0.34 | <0.01 |
| MCI | 80 | 57 | 74.7 (6.2) | 27 (2.2) | 0.98 (0.7) | 0.14 | NS | 0.75 (0.3) | 0.01 | NS |
| AD | 78 | 69 | 76.2 (6.4) | 21 (4.5) | 0.85 (0.3) | −0.2 | NS | 0.71 (0.3) | 0.23 | 0.06 |
*MMSE; Mini mental state examination - a cognitive scale (maximum score = 30) used to screen for and assess degree of severity of dementia. A score of less than 24 indicates possible dementia. A score of 10–20 suggests moderate dementia and a score above 20, mild dementia. ** arbitrary units.