| Literature DB >> 34916411 |
Bridget Martinez1, Philip V Peplow2.
Abstract
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration describes a group of progressive brain disorders that primarily are associated with atrophy of the prefrontal and anterior temporal lobes. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration is considered to be equivalent to frontotemporal dementia. Frontotemporal dementia is characterized by progressive impairments in behavior, executive function, and language. There are two main clinical subtypes: behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia and primary progressive aphasia. The early diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia is critical for developing management strategies and interventions for these patients. Without validated biomarkers, the clinical diagnosis depends on recognizing all the core or necessary neuropsychiatric features, but misdiagnosis often occurs due to overlap with a range of neurologic and psychiatric disorders. In the studies reviewed a very large number of microRNAs were found to be dysregulated but with limited overlap between individual studies. Measurement of specific miRNAs singly or in combination, or as miRNA pairs (as a ratio) in blood plasma, serum, or cerebrospinal fluid enabled frontotemporal dementia to be discriminated from healthy controls, Alzheimer's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Furthermore, upregulation of miR-223-3p and downregulation of miR-15a-5p, which occurred both in blood serum and cerebrospinal fluid, distinguished behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia from healthy controls. Downregulation of miR-132-3p in frontal and temporal cortical tissue distinguished frontotemporal lobar degeneration and frontotemporal dementia, respectively, from healthy controls. Possible strong miRNA biofluid biomarker contenders for behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia are miR-223-3p, miR-15a-5p, miR-22-3p in blood serum and cerebrospinal fluid, and miR-124 in cerebrospinal fluid. No miRNAs were identified able to distinguish between behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia and primary progressive aphasia subtypes. Further studies are warranted on investigating miRNA expression in biofluids and frontal/temporal cortical tissue to validate and extend these findings.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; behavioral variant; biomarker; blood plasma; blood serum; brain; cerebrospinal fluid; cortical tissue; frontotemporal dementia; frontotemporal lobar degeneration; microRNA; primary progressive aphasia
Year: 2022 PMID: 34916411 PMCID: PMC8771095 DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.330591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Regen Res ISSN: 1673-5374 Impact factor: 5.135
Alterations of miRNA expression in frontotemporal degeneration in blood plasma and blood serum
| Author | Method of miRNA analysis | Comparison | miRNA analysis |
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| Kmetsch et al., 2020 | miRNA sequencing | Symptomatic mutation carriers1 vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-34a-5p, -345-5p |
| Kmetsch et al., 2020 | miRNA sequencing | Presymptomatic mutation carriers2 vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-34a-5p |
| Kmetsch et al., 2020 | miRNA sequencing | Symptomatic mutation carriers vs. | Upregulated: miR-345-5p |
| Siedlecki-Wullich et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | AD vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-92a-3p, -181c-5p, -210-3p |
| Siedlecki-Wullich et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | MCI vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-181c-5p, -210-3p |
| Siedlecki-Wullich et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | No significant differences in miR-92a-3p,-181c-5p,-210-3p |
| Grasso et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-663a, -502-3p, -206 |
| Grasso et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | bvFTD vs. PPA | No significant differences in miR-663a, -502-3p, -206 |
| Grasso et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | Male FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-663a, -502-3p, -206 |
| Grasso et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | Female FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-663a, -502-3p, let-7e-5p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. AD | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Male FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Female FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Male FTD vs. AD | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Piscopo et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Female FTD vs. AD | Downregulated: miR-127-3p |
| Sheinerman et al., 2017 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | The ratios miR-9-3p/let-7e, miR-7/miR-451, miR-335-5p/let-7e distinguished FTD from HC |
| Sheinerman et al., 2017 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. AD | The ratios miR-125b/miR-29a, miR-125b/miR-874, miR-107/miR-335-5p distinguished FTD from AD |
| Sheinerman et al., 2017 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. ALS | The ratios miR-129-3p/miR-206 and miR-338-3p/let-7e distinguished FTD from ALS |
| Sørensen et al., 2016 | RT-PCR | AD vs. other dementia types (vascular, FTD, DLB) | Upregulated: miR-590-5p,-142-5p but not significant by Benjamini-Hochberg |
| Sheinerman et al., 2012 | RT-PCR | MCI vs. HC | The ratios miR-128/miR-491-5p, miR-132/miR-491-5p, miR-874/miR-491-5p, miR-134/miR-370, miR-323-3p/ miR-370, miR-382/miR-370 distinguished MCI from HC |
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| Denk et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | bvFTD vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-143-3p, -197-3p, -27a-3p, -338-3p, -491-5p, -7b-5p, -7g-5p, -106a-5p, -106b-5p, -18b-5p, -223-3p, -26a-5p, -26b-5p, -301a-3p, -30b-5p |
| Galimberti et al., 2014 | RT-PCR | AD vs. NINDC | Downregulated: miR-125b, -23a, -26b-5p |
| Galimberti et al., 2014 | RT-PCR | AD vs. FTD and INDC | No significant differences in miR-125b, -23a, -26b-5p |
AD: Alzheimer’s disease; ALS: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; bvFTD:behavioral variant FTD; DLB: dementia with Lewy bodies; FTD: frontotemporal dementia; HC: non-demented healthy controls; INDC: inflammatory neurologic disease controls; MCI: mild cognitive impairment; NINDC: non-inflammatory neurologic disease controls; PPA: primary progressive aphasia; RT-PCR: real time polymerase chain reaction. 1Symptomatic mutation carriers consisted of 15 FTD, 4 FTD/ ALS, 3 ALS patients carrying a C9orf72 expansion; 2Presymptomatic mutation carriers were 46 asymptomatic first-degree relatives of C9orf72 patients in which a pathogenic expansion was found.
Alterations of miRNA expression in frontotemporal degeneration in CSF and frontal/temporal cortical tissue
| Author | Method of miRNA analysis | Comparison | miRNA analysis |
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| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Symptomatic mutation carriers1 vs. presymptomatic mutation carriers2 | Downregulated: miR-204-5p, -632 in exosomes |
| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Symptomatic mutation carriers with either GRN or C9orf72 mutations vs. presymptomatic mutation carriers | Downegulated: miR-204-5p in exosomes |
| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | Symptomatic mutation carriers with GRN but not with C9orf72 mutations vs. presymptomatic mutation carriers | Downregulated: miR-632 in exosomes |
| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | bvFTD vs. presymptomatic mutation carriers | Downregulated: miR-204-5p, -632 in exosomes |
| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-632 in exosomes |
| Schneider et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. AD | Downregulated: miR-632 in exosomes |
| Derkow et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | AD vs. HC | Upregulated: let-7e |
| Derkow et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | MDE vs. HC | Upregulated: let-7e |
| Derkow et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTLD vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-124 |
| Derkow et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTLD vs. AD | Upregulated: miR-124 |
| Derkow et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | FTLD vs. MDE | Upregulated: miR-124 |
| Denk et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | bvFTD vs. HC | Upregulated: miR-124-3p, -125a-5p, -223-3p |
| Denk et al., 2018 | RT-PCR | bvFTD vs. AD | Downregulated: miR-140-3p, -30a-5p, -30e-5p, -22-3p |
| Sørensen et al., 2016 | RT-PCR | AD vs. other types of dementia | The ratio miR-29c-3p/miR-15a-5p distinguished AD from other types of dementia |
| Galimberti et al., 2014 | RT-PCR | AD vs. NINDC | Downregulated: miR-125b, -26b |
| Galimberti et al., 2014 | RT-PCR | AD vs. NINDC | No difference in miR-23a |
| Galimberti et al., 2014 | RT-PCR | AD vs. FTD and INDC | No differences in miR-125b, -26b |
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| Jawaid et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | ALS vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-183/96/182 in frontal cortex |
| Jawaid et al., 2019 | RT-PCR | FTLD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-183/96/182 in frontal cortex |
| Hébert et al., 2013 | RT-PCR | AD vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-132-3p, -100 in temporal cortex |
| Hébert et al., 2013 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. HC | Upregulated: possibly miR-100 in temporal cortex |
| Hébert et al., 2013 | RT-PCR | PSP vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-132-3p in temporal cortex |
| Hébert et al., 2013 | RT-PCR | FTD vs. AD | Upregulated: possibly miR-100 in temporal cortex |
| Chen-Plotkin et al., 2012 | RT-PCR | GRN(-)FTLD-TDP vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-132-5p, -132-3p, -212 in frontal cortex |
| Chen-Plotkin et al., 2012 | RT-PCR | GRN(+)FTLD-TDP vs. HC | Downregulated: miR-132-5p, -132-3p, -212 in frontal cortex |
AD: Alzheimer’s disease; ALS: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; bvFTD: behavioral variant FTD; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; FTD: frontotemporal dementia; FTLD: frontal temporal lobar degeneration; INDC, inflammatory neurologic disease control; MDE: major depressive episode; NINDC: non-inflammatory neurologic disease control; PPA: primary progressive aphasia; PSP: progressive supranuclear palsy; RT-PCR: real time polymerase chain reaction. 1Symptomatic mutation carriers consisted of GRN, C9orf72, MAPT mutation carriers and consisted of 12 bvFTD, 1 nfvPPA, 1 svPPA, 1 dementia not otherwise specified; 2Presymptomatic mutation carriers consisted of 23 patients.
Possible miRNA biomarker candidates in frontotemporal dementia from studies by Denk et al. (2018) and Derkow et al. (2018) and related mechanistic pathways
| Author | Number of FTH patients, gender, ages | Subjects for comparison, number, gender, ages | Sample assayed | Altered miRNA expression | Related pathway to FTH |
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| Denk et al., 2018 | 48 bvFTD1, 30M/18F, 65±9.2 yr (48 serum) | 44 HC, 20M/24F, 64±11.3 yr (38 serum) | Serum | miR-223-3p upregulated | Possible protection of surviving neurons by miR-223-3p. MiR-223-3p targets |
| miR-15a-5p downregulated | A positive linkage of miR-15a with amantadine, which is associated with the treatment of behavioral disturbances | ||||
| MiR-15a-5p targets | |||||
| miR-22-3p downregulated | MiR-22-3p targets | ||||
| Denk et al., 2018 | 48 bvFTD1, 30M/18F, 65±9.2 yr (48 CSF) | 44 HC, 20M/24F, 64±11.3 yr (44 CSF) | CSF | miR-223-3p upregulated | Possible protection of surviving neurons by miR-223-3p. MiR-223-3p targets |
| miR-124-3p upregulated | The target gene of miR-124 is AMPAR. AMPA receptors are associated with the regulation of social behavior | ||||
| miR-15a-5p downregulated | A positive linkage of miR-15a with amantadine, which is associated with the treatment of behavioral disturbances | ||||
| MiR-15a-5p targets | |||||
| Denk et al., 2018 | 48 bvFTD1, 30M/18F, 65±9.2 yr (48 CSF) | 48 AD1, 22M/26F, 65±9.3 yr (48 CSF) | CSF | miR-22-3p downregulated | MiR-22-3p targets |
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| Derkow et al., 2018 | 8 FTD, 3M/5F, 64±11.5 yr | 10 HC, 7M/3F, 58.3±11 yr | CSF | miR-124 upregulated | The target gene of miR-124 is |
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| Derkow et al., 2018 | 8 FTD, 3M/5F, 64±11.5 yr | 12 AD, 2M/10F, 71.5±8.5 yr | CSF | miR-124 upregulated | The target gene of miR-124 is |
AD: Alzheimer’s disease; AMPA: α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; F: female; FTD: frontotemporal dementia; bvFTD: behavioral variant FTD; FTLD: frontotemporal lobar degeneration; HC: healthy controls; M: male; yr: years. 1A total of 41 of the 48 bvFTD and 20 of the 48 AD cases were tested negative for the most prominent gene C9orf72, and no mutations in the genes MAPT and GRN were identified in the tested AD (n=11) and bvFTD (n = 11) cases.