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A brain proteomic signature of incipient Alzheimer's disease in young

Authors :
Jackson A, Roberts
Vijay R, Varma
Yang, An
Sudhir, Varma
Julián, Candia
Giovanna, Fantoni
Vinod, Tiwari
Carlos, Anerillas
Andrew, Williamson
Atsushi, Saito
Tina, Loeffler
Irene, Schilcher
Ruin, Moaddel
Mohammed, Khadeer
Jacqueline, Lovett
Toshiko, Tanaka
Olga, Pletnikova
Juan C, Troncoso
David A, Bennett
Marilyn S, Albert
Kaiwen, Yu
Mingming, Niu
Vahram, Haroutunian
Bin, Zhang
Junmin, Peng
Deborah L, Croteau
Susan M, Resnick
Myriam, Gorospe
Vilhelm A, Bohr
Luigi, Ferrucci
Madhav, Thambisetty
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Description<br />Brain proteins altered in young APOE ε4 carriers are found decades later in Alzheimer’s disease and present novel drug targets.<br />Aptamer-based proteomics revealed differentially abundant proteins in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) brains in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging and Religious Orders Study (mean age, 89 ± 9 years). A subset of these proteins was also differentially abundant in the brains of young APOE ε4 carriers relative to noncarriers (mean age, 39 ± 6 years). Several of these proteins represent targets of approved and experimental drugs for other indications and were validated using orthogonal methods in independent human brain tissue samples as well as in transgenic AD models. Using cell culture–based phenotypic assays, we showed that drugs targeting the cytokine transducer STAT3 and the Src family tyrosine kinases, YES1 and FYN, rescued molecular phenotypes relevant to AD pathogenesis. Our findings may accelerate the development of effective interventions targeting the earliest molecular triggers of AD.

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
7
Issue :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science advances
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........0d79ee4fd60a92c899b14ea030dc199f