| Literature DB >> 27511317 |
Qingwei Ruan1, Grazia D'Onofrio2, Daniele Sancarlo2, Antonio Greco2, Zhuowei Yu1.
Abstract
Cognitive frailty (CF) overlaps with early neuropathological alterations associated with aging‑related major neurocognitive disorders, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Fluid biomarkers for these pathological brain alterations allow for early diagnosis in the preclinical stages of AD, and for objective prognostic assessments in clinical intervention trials. These biomarkers may also be helpful in the screening of CF. The present study reviewed the literature and identified systematic reviews of cohort studies and other authoritative reports. The selection criteria for potentially suitable fluid biomarkers included: i) Frequent use in studies of fluid‑derived markers and ii) evidence of novel measurement techniques for fluid‑derived markers. The present study focused on studies that assessed these biomarkers in AD, mild cognitive impairment and non‑AD demented subjects. At present, widely used fluid biomarkers include cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), total tau, phosphorylated tau and amyloid‑β levels. With the development of novel measurement techniques and improvements in understanding regarding the mechanisms underlying aging‑related major neurocognitive disorders, numerous novel biomarkers associated with various aspects of AD neuropathology are being explored. These include specific measurements of Aβ oligomer or monomer forms, tau proteins in the peripheral plasma and CSF, and novel markers of synaptic dysfunction, neuronal damage and apoptosis, neuronal activity alteration, neuroinflammation, blood brain barrier dysfunction, oxidative stress, metabolites, mitochondrial function and aberrant lipid metabolism. The proposed panels of fluid biomarkers may be useful in the early diagnosis of AD, prediction of the progression of AD from preclinical stages to the dementia stage, and the differentiation of AD from non‑AD dementia. In combination with physical frailty, the present study surmised that these biomarkers may also be used as biomarkers for CF, thus contribute to discovering causes and informing interventions for cognitive impairment in individuals with CF.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27511317 PMCID: PMC5042792 DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2016.5618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med Rep ISSN: 1791-2997 Impact factor: 2.952
Figure 1Flowchart of the screening of articles related to potential fluid biomarkers for pathological brain alterations in Alzheimer's disease.
Possible blood-derived markers for identifying the risk of MCI and AD.
| Study | Methods | Identified biomarkers | AD (n) | MCI (n) | Control (n) | Refs. (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Borroni | Western blot analysis | Decreased baseline platelet APP predicted progression from MCI to AD | – | 30 | – | |
| Zetterberg | Tau5, HT7 and BT2 monoclonal antibodies | Higher tau levels in AD | 54 | 75 | 25 | |
| Zhang | Post-mortem autopsy | Deletion of the AEP gene substantially reduced tau hyperphosphorylation | 8 | – | 8 | |
| Mapstone | LASSO analysis | ApoE ε4 was similar in MCI and AD | 18 | 35 | 53 | |
| Whiley | LC-MS and MLV | Three PCs were significantly lower in AD | 75 | 82 | 84 | |
| Marksteiner | Multiplex array or ELISA | 27 vascular-related proteins; NT-proBNP was significantly increased in AD and MCI | 43 | 27 | 40 | |
| Hye | Multiplex (xMAP) assays | 10 plasma proteins (ApoC3, TTR, A1AT, PEDF, CC4, ICAM 1, RANTES, A1AcidG, cystatin C, clusterin) were associated with disease severity and progression | 476 | 220 | 452 | |
| Lane | ELISA, MRI | MCI with ApoE ε4 and BCHE-K progressed to AD | – | 464 | – | |
| Soares | Multiplex immunoassay panel | Increases in eotaxin 3, pancreatic polypeptide, NT-proBNP and TN-C; decreases in IgM and ApoE levels in patients with AD and MCI; Apo ε3/ε4 or ε4/ε4 carriers had low C-reactive protein and ApoE levels, and high cortisol, interleukin-13, apolipoprotein B and gamma interferon levels | 97 | 345 | 54 | |
| Sattlecker | SOMAscan | PSA-ACT, pancreatic prohormone, clusterin and fetuin B were related to AD | 331 | 149 | 211 | |
| Craig-Schapiro | 2-D DIGE LC-MS/MS and ELISA | YKL-40, a putative indicator of neuroinflammation, is elevated in AD, and together with Aβ42, has potential prognostic use as a biomarker for preclinical AD | 48 (with FTD and other dementia) | – | – | |
| Mangialasche | HPLC | Vitamin E measures enchanced the accuracy of sMRI differentiating patients with AD and MCI from cognitively healthy subjects | 81 | 86 | 86 | |
| Squitti | Spectrophotometry and immunoturbidimetry assay | Higher baseline levels of free copper were correlated with severe cognitive decline in AD and more obvious disabilities at 1 year | 81 | – | – | |
| Pavlopoulos | Post-mortem human autopsy and mouse study | RbAp48 decline is responsible for age-related memory loss | 8 | – | – | |
| Nettiksimmons | ELISA and INNO BIA assays | Higher risk index of blood markers (telomere length, cystatin, serum glucose, C-reactive protein, albumin, IL-6, ApoE ε4 and Aβ42/40) exhibited severe cognitive decline | – | – | 739 | |
| Apostolova | Luminex, quantitative polymerase chain reaction | ApoE genotype, plasma levels of IL-6R and clusterin were useful for predicting brain amyloidosis; ApoE genotype and plasma IL-6R were useful for predicting the conversion of MCI to AD | – | 211 | – |
MCI, mild cognitive impairment; AD, Alzheimer's disease; APP, amyloid precursor proteins; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; ApoE, apolipoprotein E; BCHE-K, butyrylcholinesterase K-variant; 2-D DIGE, 2-D Fluorescence Difference Gel Electrophoresis; LC-MS, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; YKL-40, chitinase-3-like-1; Aβ, amyloid-β; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide; TNC, tenascin C; IgM, immunoglobulin M; IL-6, interleukin 6; IL-6R, interleukin 6 receptor; HPLC, reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography; HT7 and BT2, anti-tau monoclonal antibody; LASSO, ligand activity by surface similarity order; MLV, multiplatform lipidomic validation; PC, phosphatidylcholine; TTR, transthyretin; A1AT, alpha-1 antitrypsin; PEDF, pigment epithelium-derived factor; CC4: complement C4; ICAM-1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1, RANTES, regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted; A1AcidG, alpha-1-acid glycoprotein; PSA-ACT, prostate-specific antigen complexed to α1-antichymotrypsin; AEP, asparagine endopeptodase.
CSF-derived markers for identifying the risk of MCI and AD.
| Studies | Methods | Identified biomarkers | AD (n) | MCI (n) | Control (n) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lautner | ELISA | Low CSF Aβ in AD and MCI was independent of ApoE genotype | 309 | 287 | 251 | |
| Riemenschneider | ELISA | Aβ42 levels were significantly decreased in patients with MCI that progressed to probable AD and those with progressive MCI compared with subjects with stable MCI | 10 | 28 | – | |
| Ewers | Multiplex Xmap, luminex platform | CSF Aβ42 exhibited the best diagnostic accuracy to discriminate AD from FTD, but showed significant overlap with other types of NAD dementia | 167 | 172 | 55 | |
| Landau | Multiplex xMAP, luminex and Florbetapir image | CSF and amyloid-PET measurements of Aβ were consistent in 86% subjects; CSF Aβ abnormality was not regularly detected prior to fibrillar Aβ accumulation | 22 | 249 | 103 | |
| Nettiksimmons | TaqMan, multiplex Xmap, luminex platform, sMRI | CSF proteins, together with MRI and ApoE ε4, allele may represent the earliest stages of AD | – | – | 112 | |
| Okonkwo | Multiplex Xmap, luminex platform, PFAQ | Abnormal CSF levels of t-tau, p-tau and Aβ42 predicted functional decline and the conversion from control and MCI to AD, but not further prognosis in patients with AD | 100 | 195 | 114 | |
| Mattsson | ELISA | CSF Aβ42, t-tau, and p-tau could identify incipient AD with good accuracy in patients with MCI | 529 | 750 | 304 | |
| Laudau | ELISA | P-tau181p/Aβ_1-42 predicted longitudinal cognitive decline | – | 85 | – | |
| Van Rossum | ELISA | The injury markers CSF t-tau and p-tau and hippocampal atrophy could predict further cognitive decline | – | 110 | – | |
| Vemuri | STAND | T-tau, p-tau and Aβ42 provided better predictive values than either source alone with regards to the conversion from aMCI to AD | 98 | 192 | 109 | |
| Eckerström | ELISA, sMRI | The combination of CSF Aβ42, t-tau, and p-tau, neuropsychological tests and sMRI was the best predictor of dementia | – | 21 | 26 | |
| Shaffer | xMAP luminex platform | Combination of imaging and CSF biomarkers could improve the prediction of conversion from MCI to AD | – | 97 | – | |
| Vemuri | Multiplex Xmap, Luminex platform, sMRI | There was no significant average change in CSF biomarkers except t-tau; ApoE ε4 genotype did not influence the changes in CSF biomarkers | 71 | 149 | 92 | |
| Sutphen | ELISA, PET + PiB | Longitudinal CSF biomarker patterns consistent with AD were first detectable during early middle age, and were associated with later amyloid positivity and cognitive decline | – | – | 169 |
MCI, mild cognitive impairment; AD, Alzheimer's disease; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; Aβ, amyloid-β; STAND, structural abnormality index; t-, total; p-, phosphorylated; aMCI, amnestic MCI; sMRI, structural magnetic resonance imaging; ApoE, apolipoprotein E; PFAQ, Pfeffer Functional Activities Questionnaire; PET, positron emission tomography; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; NAD, non-Alzheimer's disease; PiB, Pittsburgh compound B.
Potential associated CSF-derived markers for identifying risk of MCI and AD.
| Studies | Methods | Identified biomarkers | AD (n) | MCI (n) | Control (n) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ewers | ELISA | The ApoE ε4 genotype was related to increased BACE 1 activity in AD and MCI subjects | 60 | 51 | 37 | |
| Blennow | ELISA | BBB disturbance is not associated with AD and age, but is associated with vascular factors | 118 | – | 50 | |
| Skoog | ELISA | Significantly higher CSF/serum albumin levels were detected in AD, VaD and women that developed dementia | 13 | – | 29 | |
| Matsumoto | ELISA | BBB disturbance was related to MTLA, but not to Aβ transport across the BBB | 42 | – | – | |
| Zetterberg | Multiplex assay | Higher BACE 1 activity in AD and in MCI that progressed to AD | 87 | 113 | 33 | |
| Olsson | ELISA | The levels of sAPP α and β did not change between AD and healthy controls, but sAPP β significantly increased in patients with MCI compared to healthy controls | 81 | 19 | 42 | |
| Perneczky | ELISA | The levels of sAPP β in the MCI-AD group were significantly higher than in the MCI-NAD and FTD groups | 21 | 58 | 8 | |
| Lewczuk | Multiplex assay | The levels of sAPP α and β were significantly higher in the AD and MCI-AD groups compared with the MCI-NAD and control groups; ApoE ε4 allele did not affect the levels of sAPP α and β | 88 | 71 | 155 | |
| Hansson | Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio was superior to Aβ42 concentration with regards to identifying incipient AD in MCI | – | 137 | – | ||
| Hölttä et al, 2013 | ELISA + N-terminal monoclonal antibody (82E1) | Higher concentrations of Aβ oligomers in the CSF of AD individuals | 199 | 165 | 148 | |
| Herskovits | ELISA + luminex platform | Higher concentrations of Aβ oligomers in the CSF of AD individuals | 20 | – | 19 | |
| Savage | ELISA | Correlation between Aβ40 and oligomers in AD | 63 | – | 54 | |
| Yang | ELISA | Higher concentrations of Aβ oligomers in CSF of AD | 10 | 10 | 10 | |
| Kvartsberg | Mass spectrometry and ELISA | High CSF Ng levels in AD and MCI | 100 | 40 | 80 | |
| Portelius | In-house immunoassay | Levels of neurogranin were AD≥MCI-AD>stable MCI>controls | 95 | 173 | 110 | |
| Kester | A sandwich immunoassay | Baseline CSF levels of neurogranin were significantly higher in patients with AD and MCI that progressed to AD compared to controls | 65 | 61 | 37 | |
| Sjögren | ELISA | NFL levels of late-onset AD and FTD were significantly increased compared with controls, which may reflect white matter degeneration | 21 | – | 18 | |
| Sjögren | ELISA | CSF levels of GAP 43 correlated with CSF-tau and sAPP and were significantly increased in AD compared with controls | 47 | – | 12 | |
| de la Monte | Quantitative enzyme-linked sandwich immunoassay | Clinical and post-mortem CSF levels of AD7c-NTP are related to AD neurodegeneration and the severity of dementia | 17 | – | 11 | |
| Tarawneh | sMRI, Amyloid imaging with PC-B | CSF VILIP-1/Aβ42 predicted future cognitive impairment at least as well as tau/Aβ42 and p-tau181/Aβ42 | 98 | – | 211 | |
| Tarawneh | ELISA | CSF VILIP-1 and VILIP-1/Aβ42 predicted rates of global cognitive decline similar to tau and tau/Aβ42 | 60 | – | – | |
| Tarawneh | ELISA | CSF VILIP-1 levels predict rates of whole-brain and regional atrophy similar to tau and p-tau181 | 23 | – | 64 | |
| Czech | GC-MS and LC-MS/MS | Increased cortisol levels seemed to be related to the progression of AD; increased cysteine associated with decreased uridine was the best paired combination to identify mild AD | 79 | – | 51 | |
| Liguori | Chemistry assays + ELISA | Lactate levels were significantly higher in AD compared with in controls and VaD; higher CSF levels of t-tau and p-tau proteins corresponded to lower lactate levels | 145 | – | 80 | |
| Vafadar Isfahani | Bioinformatic analysis of proteomic profiles | Levels of the biomarker panel, including SPARC-like 1 protein, fibrinogen alpha chain precursor, Aβ, ApoE precursor, serum albumin precursor, keratin type I cytoskeletal 9 and tetranectin were AD>MCI>controls | 33 | 10 | 20 | |
| Wildsmith | Targeted proteomics | Amyloid precursor protein, neuronal pentraxin receptor, NrCAM and chromogranin A exhibited significant longitudinal changes in AD | 45 | 5 | 10 | |
| Olsson | ELISA | CSF levels of HFABP were significantly elevated in subjects with AD, and MCI that progressed to AD or VaD | 96 | 170 | 65 | |
| Brys | Negative ion chemical ionization gas chromatography/mass spectrometry | P-tau (231) is the strongest predictor of the decline from MCI to AD; IP levels uniquely exhibit longitudinal progression effects | – | 22 | 21 | |
| Ayton | Myriad Rules Based Medicine platform, Luminex platform | Baseline CSF ferritin levels were negatively associated with cognitive performance, and predicted MCI progression to AD | 67 | 144 | 91 |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; BBB, blood brain barrier; VaD, vascular dementia; AD7c-NTP, AD-associated neuronal thread protein; NFL, neurofilament; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; GAP 43, growth associated protein 43; sAPP, soluble amyloid precursor proteins; MTLA, medial temporal lobe atrophy; Aβ, amyloid-β; BACE 1, β-secretase; p-, phosphorylated; t-, total; IP, isoprostane; sMRI, structural magnetic resonance imaging; PC-B, Pittsburgh compound-B; VILIP-1, visinin-like protein-1; ApoE, apolipoprotein E; GC-MS, gas chromatography mass-spectrometry; LC-MS/MS, light chromatograpgy MS/MS; HFABP, heart fatty acid binding protein; Ng, neurogranin; NrCAM, neuronal cell adhesion molecule.
Possible urinary-derived markers for identifying risk of MCI and AD.
| Study | Methods | Identified biomarkers | AD (n) | MCI (n) | Control (n) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ghanbari | ELISA | Higher urinary AD7c-NTP in AD | 66 | – | 134 | |
| Ma | ELISA | Higher AD7c-NTP levels in MCI | 45 | 60 | 65 | |
| Zengi | HPLC-ECD | Urinary 8-OHdG levels and serum PON1 activity could be used to determine and monitor the status of patients with AD | 21 | – | 20 | |
| Kim | GC-MS | PGF (2 alpha) was increased in AD | 34 | – | 20 | |
| Yoshida | LC-MS/MS + ELISA | 3-HPMA/Cre was the most reliable biochemical marker to distinguish AD from MCI | 32 | 22 | 74 | |
| Rabassa | F-C assay | High concentrations of polyphenols were associated with a lower risk of cognitive decline | 652 (demented-free) | – | – |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; AD7c-NTP, AD-associated neuronal thread protein; GC-MS, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; PGF (2 alpha), prostaglandin F (2 alpha); HPLC-ECD, high-performance liquid chromatography-electrochemical detection; 8-OHdG, 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine; PON1, paraoxonase/arylesterase 1; LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography-MS/MS; 3-HPMA/Cre, 3-hydroxypropyl mercapturic acid/creatinine; F-C, Folin-Ciocalteu.