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Are EPB41 and alpha-synuclein diagnostic biomarkers of sport-related concussion? Findings from the NCAA and Department of Defense CARE Consortium

Authors :
Rany Vorn
Christina Devoto
Timothy B. Meier
Chen Lai
Sijung Yun
Steven P. Broglio
Sara Mithani
Thomas W. McAllister
Christopher C. Giza
Hyung-Suk Kim
Daniel Huber
Jaroslaw Harezlak
Kenneth L. Cameron
Gerald McGinty
Jonathan Jackson
Kevin M. Guskiewicz
Jason P. Mihalik
Alison Brooks
Stefan Duma
Steven Rowson
Lindsay D. Nelson
Paul Pasquina
Michael A. McCrea
Jessica M. Gill
Source :
Journal of sport and health science.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Current protein biomarkers are only moderately predictive at identifying individuals with mild traumatic brain injury or concussion. Therefore, more accurate diagnostic markers are needed for sport-related concussion.This was a multicenter, prospective, case-control study of athletes who provided blood samples and were diagnosed with a concussion or were a matched non-concussed control within the National Collegiate Athletic Association-Department of Defense Concussion Assessment, Research, and Education Consortium conducted between 2015 and 2019. The blood was collected within 48 h of injury to identify protein abnormalities at the acute and subacute timepoints. Athletes with concussion were divided into 6 h post-injury (0-6 h post-injury) and after 6 h post-injury (7-48 hours post-injury) groups. We applied a highly multiplexed proteomic technique that used a DNA aptamers assay to target 1305 proteins in plasma samples from athletes with and without sport-related concussion.A total of 140 athletes with concussion (79.3% male; aged 18.71 ± 1.10 years, mean ± SD) and 21 non-concussed athletes (76.2% male; 19.14 ± 1.10 years) were included in this study. We identified 338 plasma proteins that significantly differed in abundance (319 upregulated and 19 downregulated) in concussed athletes compared to non-concussed athletes. The top 20 most differentially abundant proteins discriminated concussed athletes from non-concussed athletes with an area under the curve of 0.954 (95% confidence interval: 0.922‒0.986). Specifically, after 6 h of injury, the individual area under the curve of plasma erythrocyte membrane protein band 4.1 (EPB41) and alpha-synuclein were 0.956 and 0.875, respectively. The combination of EPB41 and alpha-synuclein provided the best area under the curve (1.000), which suggests this combination of candidate plasma biomarkers is best for diagnosing concussion in athletes after 6 h of injury.Our data suggest that proteomic profiling may provide novel diagnostic protein markers and that a combination of EPB41 and alpha-synuclein is the most predictive biomarker of concussion after 6 h of injury.

Details

ISSN :
22132961
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of sport and health science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08a38fc3d430f34db083501834f8b82f