| Literature DB >> 25470145 |
Sebastian Heinzel1, Maike Gold2, Christian Deuschle3, Felix Bernhard1, Walter Maetzler3, Daniela Berg3, Richard Dodel2.
Abstract
Alpha-synuclein (α-Syn) plays a pivotal role in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease (PD), which can partly be modulated by innate and adaptive immune functions, and vice versa. Here, naturally occurring α-Syn autoantibodies (α-Syn-nAbs) may be effective against α-Syn pathoetiology and may serve as a PD biomarker. However, serum and cerebrospinal fluid α-Syn-nAbs levels still lack consistent evidence as required for a reliable PD biomarker. Serum and cerebrospinal fluid α-Syn-nAbs levels of 66 PD patients and 69 healthy controls were assessed using a validated ELISA assay. Moreover, potential sources of error variance including unspecific ELISA background signals, free serum hemoglobin concentrations, α-Syn plate coating procedures, and differences in α-Syn-nAbs standards, were investigated. PD patients and controls did not differ in serum (p = .49) nor cerebrospinal fluid (p = .29) α-Syn-nAbs levels. Interestingly, free serum hemoglobin concentrations were negatively correlated with α-Syn-nAbs levels in controls (Spearman ρ = -.41, p<.001), but not in PD patients (ρ = .16, p = .21). ELISA α-Syn plate coating procedures impacted inter-assay variability (same day coating: 8-16%; coating on different days: 16-58%). α-Syn-nAbs standards from different purification batches differed regarding optical density measured in ELISAs suggesting differences in α-Syn affinity. While α-Syn-nAbs levels may represent a potential PD biomarker, several methodological issues have to be considered to increase reproducibility of α-Syn-nAbs findings. Further studies using standardized protocols minimizing sources of error variance may be necessary to establish a reliable PD α-Syn-nAbs biomarker.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25470145 PMCID: PMC4255021 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Results of the ELISA of α-Syn-nAbs quantified by optical density (OD) in a) serum and b) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of healthy controls (HC) and Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients.
Figure 2Scatterplot and Spearman correlations (rho, p-values) of α-Syn-nAbs OD and hemoglobin concentrations for the overall sample and separately for healthy controls (black dots/line) and PD patients (grey dots/line).
Figure 3Inter-assay variability of optical densities (ODs) of α-Syn-nAbs standards measured on plates coated with α-Syn on the same day (assays #1, #2) and coated on different days (assays #3, #4).
Figure 4Dot blots of the two α-Syn-nAbs standard preparations of one IvIG batch and the affinity chromatography flow-through showing the specific binding of the purified antibody to recombinant α-Syn in different dilutions.
Figure 5Results of the ELISA of purified α-Syn-nAbs standards from two different preparations of one IvIG batch quantified by optical density (OD; mean ± standard deviation) at 450
nm.