| Literature DB >> 30244311 |
Hlin Kvartsberg1, Tammaryn Lashley2,3, Christina E Murray2,4, Gunnar Brinkmalm5,6, Nicholas C Cullen5, Kina Höglund5,6,7, Henrik Zetterberg5,3,4,6, Kaj Blennow5,6, Erik Portelius5,6.
Abstract
Synaptic degeneration and neuronal loss are early events in Alzheimer's disease (AD), occurring long before symptom onset, thus making synaptic biomarkers relevant for enabling early diagnosis. The postsynaptic protein neurogranin (Ng) is a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker for AD, also in the prodromal phase. Here we tested the hypothesis that during AD neurodegeneration, processing of full-length Ng into endogenous peptides in the brain is increased. We characterized Ng in post-mortem brain tissue and investigated the levels of endogenous Ng peptides in relation to full-length protein in brain tissue of patients with sporadic (sAD) and familial Alzheimer's disease (fAD), healthy controls and individuals who were cognitively unaffected but amyloid-positive (CU-AP) in two different brain regions. Brain tissue from parietal cortex [sAD (n = 10) and age-matched controls (n = 10)] and temporal cortex [sAD (n = 9), fAD (n = 10), CU-AP (n = 13) and controls (n = 9)] were included and all the samples were analyzed by three different methods. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry, 39 endogenous Ng peptides were identified while full-length Ng was found to be modified including disulfide bridges or glutathione. In sAD parietal cortex, the ratio of peptide-to-total full-length Ng was significantly increased for eight endogenous Ng peptides compared to controls. In the temporal cortex, several of the peptide-to-total full-length Ng ratios were increased in both sAD and fAD cases compared to controls and CU-AP. This finding was confirmed by western blot, which mainly detects full-length Ng, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, most likely detecting a mix of peptides and full-length Ng. In addition, Ng was significantly associated with the degree of amyloid and tau pathology. These results suggest that processing of Ng into peptides is increased in AD brain tissue, which may reflect the ongoing synaptic degeneration, and which is also mirrored as increased levels of Ng peptides in CSF.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Brain tissue; Familial Alzheimer’s disease; Mass spectrometry; Neurogranin
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30244311 PMCID: PMC6338696 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-018-1910-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Demographics and clinical characteristics of subjects included in study 1 and 2
| sAD | Control | fAD | CU-AP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Gender, | 6/4 (60) | 6/4 (60) | ||
| Age at death | 77 [72–79] | 72.5 [69.5–80.5] | ||
| Post-mortem delay, (h) | 5 [4–6] | 7 [6–7] | ||
| Braak stage 0–I/II–IV/V–VI | 0/0/10 | 10/0/0 | ||
|
| ||||
| Gender, | 3/6 (33) | 5/4 (56) | 6/4 (60) | 9/4 (69) |
| Age at onset | 60 [52–69]§ | n/a | 43 [36–53] | n/a |
| Duration, (years) | 11.5 [10–15] | n/a | 9 [5–13] | n/a |
| Age at death | 72 [66–80]* | 82 [70–85]¤ | 54 [46–65]# | 88 [84–91] |
| Post-mortem delay, (h) | 65 [47–92] | 75 [40–86] | 38 [26–65]## | 78 [39–102] |
| Brain weight, (g) | 1116 [1009–1244]† | 1330 [1250–1474] | 1108 [880–1320]¤¤ | 1264 [1192–1421] |
| Braak stage 0–I/II–IV/V–VI | 0/0/9 | 7/2/0 | 0/0/10 | 1/12/0 |
| Thal stage 0–1/2–4/5–6 | 0/0/9 | 8/1/0 | 0/0/10 | 1/9/3 |
| CERAD score 0/A/B/C | 0/0/0/9 | 6/2/0/1 | 0/0/0/10 | 2/6/5 |
| ABC score, minimum–maximum | A3B3C3 | A0B0C0–A2B1C1/A1B2C1 | A3B3C3 | A1B2C2–A3B2C2 |
| Mutation, | 8/2 | |||
| ELISA, (ng/mg) total protein | 253.9 [137-346.2] | 398.1 [305.9–631.8] | 291.2 [169.9–363.3]### | 518.7 [440.1–741.7] |
Differences between groups in study 1 were assessed using Mann–Whitney U test. Comparisons between groups in study 2 were performed using Kruskal–Wallis test with data adjusted for post-mortem delay, followed by pairwise Mann–Whitney U tests if significant. The data are presented as median and [interquartile range]
§sAD vs fAD p = 0.003; *sAD vs CU-AP p = 0.033; †sAD vs controls p = 0.013; ¤fAD vs control p = 0.032; ¤¤fAD vs control p = 0.025; #fAD vs CU-AP p < 0.0001; ##fAD vs CU-AP p = 0.029; ###fAD vs CU-AP p = 0.017
Fig. 1Hybrid immunoaffinity–mass spectrometric characterization of endogenous neurogranin peptides in human brain tissue. Several short endogenous C-terminal peptides were repeatedly detected in human parietal cortex using the monoclonal antibodies Ng2 + Ng3 and MALDI TOF/TOF. Ng43–75* represents internal standard fully labeled with 13C
Fig. 2Summary of all identified neurogranin peptides in human brain tissue. In total, 39 endogenous Ng peptides were identified using a combination of HI–MS and high-resolution mass spectrometry
Fig. 3Hybrid immunoaffinity–mass spectrometric characterization of full-length neurogranin in human brain tissue. A cluster of peaks representing full-length Ng with different sets PTMs (a). Amino acid sequence of Ng1–78 with acetyl, disulfide bridge and GSH with the positions of PTMs and b- and y-ions identified from a single MS/MS acquisition indicated (b). Full-length Ng with different PTM arrangements had different retention time during high-resolution LC–MS/MS analysis (c). Expansion of the m/z range around m/z 7500 in a MALDI mass spectrum from human brain tissue after heat-treatment without reduction with DTT showed a cluster of peaks representing Ng1–78. The rightmost peak represents Ng1–78 + acetyl + GSH + disulfide bridge (d). A similar mass spectrum from human brain tissue after heat-treatment and reduction with DTT showed another cluster of peaks representing full-length Ng. Here the peak representing Ng1–78 + acetyl + GSH + disulfide bridge was greatly reduced (e)
Fig. 4Scatterplots displaying the result from hybrid-immunoaffinity mass spectrometry in study 1. Scatterplots displaying the peptide-to-total full-length Ng ratio ×1000 for Ng53–75 (a), Ng53–78 (b), Ng51–78 (c), Ng48–76 (d), Ng48–78 (e), Ng44–76 (f), Ng42–78 (g) and Ng41–78 (h). The data presented are median and interquartile ranges. Differences between groups were assessed using Mann–Whitney U test
Fig. 5Scatterplots and western blot analysis of study 2. Scatterplot displaying the peptide-to-total full-length Ng ratio ×1000 for Ng53–78. #Sample ratio is > 150,000 (a). Scatterplot displaying total full-length Ng concentration measured by HI–MS (b). WB using the monoclonal antibody Ng36 (left blot) or no primary antibody (right blot). Briefly, samples were relatively quantified in WB by including a standard curve of recombinant Ng-MYC-DDK protein on each gel. Lanes 1–5: standard curve of Ng–Myc–DKK fusion protein ranging from 25 to 1.56 ng. Lane 6: quality control (QC) brain tissue sample. Lanes 7–9: patient samples from study 2. Lane 10: QC tissue sample. Lane 11: Ng–Myc–DKK fusion protein 12.5 ng. Lanes 10 and 11 were used as negative controls (c). Scatterplot displaying results from WB analysis. The y-axis displays the Ng concentration in ng/mg total protein in each sample (d). Scatterplot displaying ELISA results. The y-axis displays the Ng concentration in ng/mg total protein in each sample (e). The data presented are median and interquartile ranges. Comparisons between groups were performed using Kruskal–Wallis test with data adjusted for post-mortem delay, followed by pairwise Mann–Whitney U tests if significant