| Literature DB >> 29848382 |
Edward G Stopa1, Keith Q Tanis2, Miles C Miller1, Elena V Nikonova2, Alexei A Podtelezhnikov2, Eva M Finney2, David J Stone2, Luiz M Camargo2, Lisan Parker2, Ajay Verma3, Andrew Baird4, John E Donahue1, Tara Torabi1, Brian P Eliceiri4, Gerald D Silverberg1, Conrad E Johanson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Alzheimer's disease, there are striking changes in CSF composition that relate to altered choroid plexus (CP) function. Studying CP tissue gene expression at the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier could provide further insight into the epithelial and stromal responses to neurodegenerative disease states.Entities:
Keywords: Blood–CSF barrier inflammatome; CSF homocysteine; Cadherin-mediated adhesion; Choroid plexus methionine; Choroid plexus transcriptome; Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK-STAT); LRP-1; Mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR); Neuroimmune CSF regulation; Peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR); Vascular endothelial growth factor
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29848382 PMCID: PMC5977762 DOI: 10.1186/s12987-018-0102-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fluids Barriers CNS ISSN: 2045-8118
Demographic and clinical data of choroid plexus samples collected
| Sample ID # | Diagnosis | Age | Sex | PMI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CP_CTR_007 | Control | 62 | M | 23.9 |
| CP_CTR_008 | Control | 55 | F | 29 |
| CP_CTR_009 | Control | 37 | M | 18.7 |
| CP_CTR_010 | Control | 64 | M | 25.8 |
| CP_CTR_011 | Control | 69 | F | 12.3 |
| CP_CTR_012 | Control | 70 | M | N/A |
| CP_ALZ_015 | AD (Braak III–IV) | 74 | F | 15 |
| CP_ALZ_017 | AD (severe Braak V–VI) | 84 | F | N/A |
| CP_ALZ_018 | AD (severe Braak V–VI) | 84 | M | N/A |
| CP_ALZ_019 | AD (severe + Lewy body disease) | 84 | F | N/A |
| CP_ALZ_020 | AD (severe Braak V–VI) | 89 | M | N/A |
| CP_ALZ_022 | AD (severe Braak V–VI) | 73 | M | 24.5 |
| CP_ALZ_023 | AD (severe Braak V–VI) | 70 | M | 10.8 |
| CP_FTD_024 | FTD | 76 | M | N/A |
| CP_FTD_025 | FTD and motor neuron disease | 75 | F | N/A |
| CP_FTD_026 | FTD Pick’s disease | 58 | M | N/A |
| CP_FTD_027 | FTD | 80 | F | N/A |
| CP_HuD_029 | HuD (grade IV) | 68 | M | 30.1 |
| CP_HuD_030 | HuD (grade IV) | 65 | F | 3.5 |
| CP_HuD_031 | HuD (grade IV) | 80 | M | 24 |
Fig. 1Significant gene expression differences between Ctrl and diseased CP: a T-test p-value distributions among all probe sets for AD (red), FTD (blue) and HuD (green) vs. Ctrl samples, as well as AD vs. combined FTD plus HuD samples (orange). Gray data points indicate number of significant probe sets expected by chance. b Overlap of probe sets differentially expressed (p < 0.01) between Ctrl and AD (red), Ctrl and FTD (blue) and Ctrl and HuD (green) subjects. c Heatmap of probe sets differentially expressed (p < 0.01) between AD and Ctrl subjects. Probe sets were ordered by agglomerative clustering. Correlation between expression changes in whole CP from AD (d), FTD (e), and HuD (f) to those reported by Bergen et al. [26] in laser-dissected CP epithelial cells from AD subjects. Plotted are the 36 genes reported in Tables 1 and 2 by Bergen et al. [26] that were also represented on the array used in our study. Values are relative to corresponding study Ctrl subjects. Filled circles had p < 0.05 in the corresponding whole CP comparisons. Dotted lines, the provided equation and r2 values represent linear fit of the data
Fig. 2Up-regulation of the JAK-STAT and mTOR pathways: Ingenuity pathway maps for a JAK-STAT signaling (transducing extracellular signals to transcriptional responses) and b mTOR signaling (a master regulator for many fundamental cellular repair processes). Genes with AD vs. Ctrl (p < 0.01) are outlined in red, and filled with red or green, indicating the magnitude of increased or decreased expression, respectively, in AD
Fig. 3Expression changes unique to AD, or to the combined HuD + FTD, non-AD ‘disease control’ group: a Heatmap of probe sets differentially expressed between AD and Ctrl subjects (p < 0.01), and altered more relative to the control in the AD group than in the non-AD ‘disease control’ group (AD/Ctrl)/(HuD + FTD/Ctrl) > 1, and AD vs. HuD + FTD, (p < 0.05). Probe sets are ordered by agglomerative clustering. b Heatmap of probe sets differentially expressed between the combined HuD + FTD group and Ctrl subjects (p < 0.01), and altered more relative to the combined HuD + FTD disease control group than in the AD group (HuD + FTD/Ctrl)/(AD/Ctrl) > 1, and HuD + FTD vs. AD, (p < 0.05). Probe sets were ordered by agglomerative clustering. Red (magenta) and green (cyan) indicate the magnitude of increased and decreased expression, respectively