| Literature DB >> 29742117 |
Mohamed Salama1,2, Ali Shalash3, Alshimaa Magdy4, Marianne Makar3, Tamer Roushdy3, Mahmoud Elbalkimy3, Hanan Elrassas5, Passent Elkafrawy6, Wael Mohamed7,8, Mohamed B Abou Donia9.
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) are characterized by progressive neuronal loss and pathological accumulation of some proteins. Developing new biomarkers for both diseases is highly important for the early diagnosis and possible development of neuro-protective strategies. Serum antibodies (AIAs) against neuronal proteins are potential biomarkers for AD and PD that may be formed in response to their release into systemic circulation after brain damage. In the present study, two AIAs (tubulin and tau) were measured in sera of patients of PD and AD, compared to healthy controls. Results showed that both antibodies were elevated in patients with PD and AD compared to match controls. Curiously, the profile of elevation of antibodies was different in both diseases. In PD cases, tubulin and tau AIAs levels were similar. On the other hand, AD patients showed more elevation of tau AIAs compared to tubulin. Our current results suggested that AIAs panel could be able to identify cases with neuro-degeneration when compared with healthy subjects. More interestingly, it is possible to differentiate between PD and AD cases through identifying specific AIAs profile for each neurodegenerative states.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29742117 PMCID: PMC5942772 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0196436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic, clinical and serum autoantibodies of patients with PD and AD diseases.
| PD Patients; Mean ± SD (n = 26) | AD patients; Mean ± SD (n = 15) | Controls; Mean ± SD (n = 10) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 52.92 ± 11.98 (range 23–69) | 71.88 ± 7.0 (range 61–81) | 61.22 ± 5.4 (range 44–72) |
| DOI (years) | 5.48 ± 3.03 (1–10) | 4.47 ± 2.81 (1–9) | —————— |
| AOO | 47.44 ± 11.38 (22–63) | 67.41 ± 6.19 (59–75) | —————— |
| MOCA | —————— | 16.13±5.20 | —————— |
| H&Y off | 3.33±1.19 | —————— | —————— |
| H&Y on | 1.54±1.15 | —————— | —————— |
| S&E OFF | 45.00±26.04 | —————— | —————— |
| S&E ON | 80.42±18.99 | —————— | —————— |
| UPDRS I off | 5.42±2.60 | —————— | —————— |
| UPDRS II off | 24.74±12.17 | —————— | —————— |
| UPDRS III off | 50.79±17.42 | —————— | —————— |
| TUB AIAs | 4.04 ± 0.30 | 3,92 ± 0.26 | 0.228 ± 0.50 |
| Tau AIAs | 3.93 ± 0.28 | 7.72 ± 6.20 | 0.45 ± 0.50 |
SD, standard deviation; H&Y, Hoehn and Yahr Scale; S&E, Schwab and England Scale, UPDRS, Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale, AIAs; autoantibodies
* = P < 0.001 compared to control.
Fig 1Serum autoantibodies titers of Tubulin (A) and Tau (B) in investigated groups. Higher levels of both AIAs were higher in patients of PD and AD compared to controls.
Fig 2Histograms showing levels of autoantibodies in different groups (mean ± SEM).
Tubulin AIAs show a significant elevation in PD and AD cases compared to control. On the other hands, Tau was elevated in both diseases with higher elevation in AD.
Fig 3Distribution curves of AIAs against tubulin (3A), tau (3B) and the combination of tubulin and tau (3C) in different groups. Curves showed possible differentiation between cases and controls (3A and 3B) and the possibility of identifying profiles specific for PD and AD (Tubulin in blue and Tau in red) (3C).