4.6 Article

VAMP-2 is a surrogate cerebrospinal fluid marker of Alzheimer-related cognitive impairment in adults with Down syndrome

期刊

ALZHEIMERS RESEARCH & THERAPY
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13195-021-00861-0

关键词

Down syndrome; Alzheimer's disease; Synapse; Biomarker; Cognitive decline

资金

  1. Fundacio Catalana Sindrome de Down
  2. Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII), Spain [PI18/00327, PI18/00435, INT19/00016, PI17/01019, PI16/01825, PI17/01895, PI18/0335, CP18/00011]
  3. National Institutes of Health, US (NIA) [R01AG056850-01A1, R21AG056974, R01AG061566]
  4. Fundacio La Marato de TV3 [20141210, 044412]
  5. Fundacio Bancaria Obra Social La Caixa (DABNI project)
  6. Fundacion BBVA
  7. Department of Health, Generalitat de Catalunya [SLT006/17/125, SLT002/16/00099, SLT006/17/00119, 2017 SGR 547]
  8. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), Union Europea, Una manera de hacer Europa''
  9. Jerome Lejeune Foundation, France
  10. [R35NS097966]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study compares the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) profile of synaptic proteins in individuals with Down syndrome (DS) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) and finds VAMP-2 as a potential marker of synapse degeneration with correlations to AD and axonal degeneration markers. NPTX2 is the only synaptic protein showing reduced CSF levels in DS at all AD stages, correlating strongly with other synaptic proteins.
Background There is an urgent need for objective markers of Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related cognitive impairment in people with Down syndrome (DS) to improve diagnosis, monitor disease progression, and assess response to disease-modifying therapies. Previously, GluA4 and neuronal pentraxin 2 (NPTX2) showed limited potential as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers of cognitive impairment in adults with DS. Here, we compare the CSF profile of a panel of synaptic proteins (Calsyntenin-1, Neuroligin-2, Neurexin-2A, Neurexin-3A, Syntaxin-1B, Thy-1, VAMP-2) to that of NPTX2 and GluA4 in a large cohort of subjects with DS across the preclinical and clinical AD continuum and explore their correlation with cognitive impairment. Methods We quantified the synaptic panel proteins by selected reaction monitoring in CSF from 20 non-trisomic cognitively normal controls (mean age 44) and 80 adults with DS grouped according to clinical AD diagnosis (asymptomatic, prodromal AD or AD dementia). We used regression analyses to determine CSF changes across the AD continuum and explored correlations with age, global cognitive performance (CAMCOG), episodic memory (modified cued-recall test; mCRT) and CSF biomarkers, CSF A beta(42:40) ratio, CSF A beta(1-42), CSF p-tau, and CSF NFL. P values were adjusted for multiple testing. Results In adults with DS, VAMP-2 was the only synaptic protein to correlate with episodic memory (delayed recall adj.p = .04) and age (adj.p = .0008) and was the best correlate of CSF A beta(42:40) (adj.p = .0001), p-tau (adj.p < .0001), and NFL (adj.p < .0001). Compared to controls, mean VAMP-2 levels were lower in asymptomatic adults with DS only (adj.p = .02). CSF levels of Neurexin-3A, Thy-1, Neurexin-2A, Calysntenin-1, Neuroligin-2, GluA4, and Syntaxin-1B all strongly correlated with NPTX2 (p < .0001), which was the only synaptic protein to show reduced CSF levels in DS at all AD stages compared to controls (adj.p < .002). Conclusion These data show proof-of-concept for CSF VAMP-2 as a potential marker of synapse degeneration that correlates with CSF AD and axonal degeneration markers and cognitive performance.

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