| Literature DB >> 23764030 |
Laura E Donovan1, Eric B Dammer2, Duc M Duong3, John J Hanfelt4, Allan I Levey1, Nicholas T Seyfried5, James J Lah1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Peripheral biomarkers to diagnose Alzheimer's disease (AD) have not been established. Given parallels between neuron and platelet biology, we hypothesized platelet membrane-associated protein changes may differentiate patients clinically defined with probable AD from noncognitive impaired controls.Entities:
Keywords: alpha granule secretion; amyloidogenic protein; blood biomarkers; coagulation; glycoprotein; mass spectrometry; matrix metalloprotease inhibitor; membrane proteomics; platelet activation
Year: 2013 PMID: 23764030 PMCID: PMC4054949 DOI: 10.1186/alzrt186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Figure 1Workflow diagram of platelet membrane purification protocol.
Figure 2Platelet isolation strategy yields samples >90% pure platelets by flow cytometry. (A) Purified platelets were double stained for allophycocyanin (APC)-conjugated, anti-CD45 (white blood cell marker, y-axis) and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-CD41 (platelet marker, x-axis). Double scatterplot demonstrates the majority of the sample stains positive for CD41, but not for CD45. (B) Histograms for CD41+ (91.36%) flow cytometry events consistent with platelet-specific enrichment, and (C), CD45+ (1.3%) events. (D) Differential centrifugation workflow for enrichment of the membrane proteome from platelets isolated from whole blood, prior to LC-MS/MS analysis. (E) Silver stain of fractions described in panel D. (F) Immunoblot demonstrating CD41 enrichment and actin depletion during the workflow to produce platelet membrane fraction (P3). LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry.
Figure 3Case-specific platelet membrane protein pooling and population results from quantitative proteomics. (A) Five control (C) and five probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) case membrane proteomes that made up the control and AD platelet membrane pools were visualized by silver staining to confirm equal contributions to the pool and to demonstrate comparable purity and integrity. (B) Gaussian fits of the null experiment (red curve) and experimental comparison replicate one (blue curve) for the population of 1,009 quantified proteins binned according to log2-transformed ratio quantified relative abundance. Significance cutoff at ±1.17 is shown as dashed vertical lines. (C) False positive counts (red trace), candidate marker proteins (blue trace), and effect on false discovery rate (FDR) (dashed green trace, scale to right) of various filtering criteria. FDR was 6.9% at the selected criteria of 1.17 log2-transformed AD/CT ratio (average of two technical replicates), coefficient of variance <100%, and signal-to-noise minimum control level greater than 10.
Figure 4Validation of thrombospondin-1 (THBS1) loss in Alzheimer's disease (AD) platelet membranes by immunoblot. (A) Immunoblot of THBS1 and CD41 as a loading control for seven control, and five AD individual cases. Cases which contributed to the pools used for proteomics have no asterisk (*). (B) Densitometry analysis of the immunoblot in panel A.
Figure 5Functional interactions among proteins discussed in this study as potential biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease (AD) in platelet membrane proteome. STRING [108] v9.0 was used to map functional interactions among the 15 platelet-activation associated proteins listed in Table 3 and other proteins mentioned as potential biomarkers.