| Literature DB >> 30425621 |
Anna M Zeitlberger1,2, Gilbert Thomas-Black1,2, Hector Garcia-Moreno1,2, Martha Foiani3,4, Amanda J Heslegrave3,4, Henrik Zetterberg3,4,5,6, Paola Giunti1,2.
Abstract
Background: Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is the most common autosomal recessive ataxia. Disease-modifying treatments are not available yet; however, several compounds are currently under investigation. As a result, there is a growing need for the identification of robust and easily accessible biomarkers for the monitoring of disease activity and therapeutic efficacy. The simultaneous measurement of multiple brain-derived proteins could represent a time- and cost-efficient approach for biomarker investigation in pathologically complex neurodegenerative diseases like FRDA.Entities:
Keywords: Friedreich’s ataxia; biomarkers; glial fibrillary acidic protein; neurofilament-light chain; tau; ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1
Year: 2018 PMID: 30425621 PMCID: PMC6218876 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
FIGURE 1Neuronal and glial biofluid markers of neurodegeneration. The glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is the main structural protein in astrocytes. The neurofilament-light chain protein (NfL) reflects damage to large-caliber myelinated axons. The microtubule binding protein tau is preferentially localized within thin, non-myelinated axons. The ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHL1) is one of the most abundant proteins in the central nervous system and localized mainly in neuronal cytoplasm.
Demographics.
| Controls | FRDA | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 6 (46.2%) | 13 (39.4%) | 0.675 |
| Female | 7 (53.8%) | 20 (60.6%) | |
| 37 (29.00–42.50) | 34 (23.50–40.00) | 0.825 | |
Summary of clinical characteristics.
| Mean ± | Range | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| AOO (years)∗ | 33 | 13 (7.50–22.50) | 2–51 |
| Disease duration (years)∗ | 33 | 18 (12.00–25.00) | 6–61 |
| GAA1 size# | 24 | 584.40 ± 64.55 | 150–1200 |
| GAA2 size# | 24 | 817.20 ± 54.17 | 534–1200 |
| SARA score | 33 | 20.44 ± 7.40 | 6.50–33.00 |
| Neuropathy | 33 | 33 (100%) | – |
FIGURE 2Comparison of plasma levels of four brain-derived proteins between FRDA patients and controls. Plasma concentrations of (A) NfL, (B) GFAP, and (C) ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHL1) are significantly increased in FRDA compared to age-matched controls. (D) Plasma tau levels were lower in FRDA patients, although this did not reach statistical significance. The horizontal bars indicate the median with error bars denoting the interquartile range. ∗p < 0.05, ∗∗p < 0.01, and ∗∗∗p < 0.001.
Intergroup comparison of plasma biomarker levels.
| Biomarker (pg/mL) | Controls | Patients |
|---|---|---|
| NfL | 7.61 (6.18–11.18) | 17.10 (13.00–24.40) |
| GFAP | 59.50 (49.75–86.88) | 99.00 (76.50–149.00) |
| T-tau | 2.08 (1.25–2.91) | 1.33 (0.92–2.03) |
| UCHL1 | 5.07 (3.33–7.55) | 14.79 (7.96–31.50) |
FIGURE 3The relationship between transformed biomarker concentrations in the patient group. (A–F) Partial correlation controlling for age are shown. The relationship between NfL and GFAP values was significant. ∗∗∗p < 0.001.
FIGURE 4Comparison between NfL measurements derived from the 4-Plex and NfL singleplex assay | (A) Individual log-transformed NfL from the 4-Plex and NfL singleplex were plotted against each other. Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient (r) evaluates the degree to which pairs of measurements fall on the 45° line, here represented as the discontinuous line, through the origin. (B) Bland–Altman Plot. Each patient sample is represented as a point on the graph. The difference between the two measurements (Neurology 4-Plex assay – Neurofilament-light singleplex assay) is plotted against the mean of the two measurements [(Neurology 4-Plex assay + NfL singleplex assay)/2]. The mean difference (1.37 pg/mL) is represented by the black line. The upper (6.48 pg/mL) and lower (-3.74 pg/mL) 95% agreement intervals, designated with discontinuous lines, are shown. These statistical limits were computed using the mean and the standard deviation (2.60 pg/mL) of the differences between two measurements.