4.6 Article

Top-Down Proteomics of Human Saliva Highlights Anti-inflammatory, Antioxidant, and Antimicrobial Defense Responses in Alzheimer Disease

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.668852

Keywords

Alzheimer disease; salivary proteomics; S100A; cystatins; alpha-defensins; thymosin beta 4; antimicrobial peptides; oxidative stress

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Funding

  1. Cagliari University (FIR-2019 Cabras Tiziana)
  2. Cagliari University (FIR-2019 Olianas Alessandra)
  3. Cagliari University (FIR-2019 Manconi Barbara)

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by misfolded proteins, inflammation, and oxidative damage in the brain, leading to neuronal cell death. The study found that the salivary protein profile of AD patients contained significantly higher levels of multifaceted proteins and peptides, suggesting that patients established defensive mechanisms at the oral level in response to injury conditions.
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most prevalent neurodegenerative disease in the elderly, characterized by accumulation in the brain of misfolded proteins, inflammation, and oxidative damage leading to neuronal cell death. By considering the viewpoint that AD onset and worsening may be influenced by environmental factors causing infection, oxidative stress, and inflammatory reaction, we investigated the changes of the salivary proteome in a population of patients with respect to that in healthy controls (HCs). Indeed, the possible use of saliva as a diagnostic tool has been explored in several oral and systemic diseases. Moreover, the oral cavity continuously established adaptative and protective processes toward exogenous stimuli. In the present study, qualitative/quantitative variations of 56 salivary proteoforms, including post-translationally modified derivatives, have been analyzed by RP-HPLC-ESI-IT-MS and MS/MS analyses, and immunological methods were applied to validate MS results. The salivary protein profile of AD patients was characterized by significantly higher levels of some multifaceted proteins and peptides that were either specific to the oral cavity or also expressed in other body districts: (i) peptides involved in the homeostasis of the oral cavity; (ii) proteins acting as ROS/RNS scavengers and with a neuroprotective role, such as S100A8, S100A9, and their glutathionylated and nitrosylated proteoforms; cystatin B and glutathionylated and dimeric derivatives; (iii) proteins with antimicrobial activity, such as or-defensins, cystatins A and B, histatin 1, statherin, and thymosin beta 4, this last with a neuroprotective role at the level of microglia. These results suggested that, in response to injured conditions, Alzheimer patients established defensive mechanisms detectable at the oral level. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXDO21538.

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