| Literature DB >> 27051355 |
Yetrib Hathout1, Haeri Seol1, Meng Hsuan J Han1, Aiping Zhang1, Kristy J Brown1, Eric P Hoffman1.
Abstract
Assessments of disease progression and response to therapies in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients remain challenging. Current DMD patient assessments include complex physical tests and invasive procedures such as muscle biopsies, which are not suitable for young children. Defining alternative, less invasive and objective outcome measures to assess disease progression and response to therapy will aid drug development and clinical trials in DMD. In this review we highlight advances in development of non-invasive blood circulating biomarkers as a means to assess disease progression and response to therapies in DMD.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Clinical outcomes; Duchenne muscular dystrophy; Mass spectrometry; Pharmacodynamic biomarkers; Proteins; SomaScan; Surrogate biomarkers; miRNA
Year: 2016 PMID: 27051355 PMCID: PMC4820909 DOI: 10.1186/s12014-016-9109-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Proteomics ISSN: 1542-6416 Impact factor: 3.988
Fig. 1Venn diagram showing overlapping and unique number of identified biomarkers by SomaScan and mass spectrometry based proteome profiling techniques. Both techniques combined identified and quantified 59 biomarkers in DMD sera samples. Biomarkers that were uniquely identified by mass spectrometry are mostly myofibrillar proteins for which there was no Somamer designed. Biomarkers that were uniquely identified by SomaScan are those that are below mass spectrometry detection limit
Fig. 2Western blot showing detection of titin fragment in serum of DMD patients. Titin was detected as a fragment around 170 kDa in serum of young DMD patients but very low in serum of older DMD patients and healthy controls. A positive control showing detection of full length titin in human muscle extract is also shown. Note that full lenght titin is 3 mega Dalton protein and stayed in the well of the gel
Fig. 3Representative serum protein biomarkers that are altered in 4 years old DMD boys. CK-M creatine kinase muscle type, CAMK2D calcium/ calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II subunit delta; MK12 mitogen-activated protein kinase 12, RET proto-oncogene tyrosine–protein kinase receptor Ret, GDF-11 growth differentiation factor-11; Cadherin-5
DMD serum protein biomarkers are tied to specific pathobiochemical pathways
| Group | Sub-group | Pathobiochemical pathway |
|---|---|---|
| Skeletal muscle enriched proteins (n = 21) | Myofibrilar proteins | Membrane instability, leakage |
| Proteins involved in connective tissue remodeling (n = 14) | Cell adhesion proteins, connective tissue, proteases | Maintenance of extracellular matrix integrity |
| Inflammatory and immune system (n = 18) | Interleukins cytokine, chemokine | Inflammation and innate pathway |
| Developmental processes (n = 6) | Cell differentiation | Muscle regeneration |
Fig. 4Plots showing changes in the serum level of three representative muscle leakage proteins in function of age in DMD patients. Data was generated using SomaScan proteome profiling on serum samples collected from 51 DMD patients with age ranging from 4 to 29 years old. Levels of the three proteins are plotted as relative fluorescent units (RFU) in function of age of DMD patients. CK-M creatine kinase muscle type, MDHC malate dehydrogenase cytosolic from, FABP3 fatty acid binding protein 3
Fig. 5Plots showing changes in the serum level of two non-CK like biomarkers in function of age in DMD patients and healthy controls. Data was generated using SomaScan proteome profiling on serum samples collected from DMD patients (filled circle) and age matched healthy controls (empty circle). A plots is for a subset of DMD patients (n = 26) and age matched healthy controls (n = 20). CDH5 cadherin-5, CXCL10 C-X-C motif chemokine 10