Serum proteomics reveals APOE dependent and independent protein signatures in Alzheimer’s disease

Author:

Gudmundsdottir Valborg1ORCID,Frick Elisabet2,Emilsson Valur2ORCID,Jonmundsson Thorarinn2ORCID,Steindorsdottir Anna1,Johnson Erik C.B.3ORCID,Puerta Raquel4,Dammer Eric5ORCID,Shantaraman Anantharaman6,Cano Amanda4,Boada Merce7ORCID,Valero Sergi4,Garcia-Gonzalez Pablo4,Gudmundsson Elias2ORCID,Gudjonsson Alexander2,Pitts Rebecca8ORCID,Qiu Xiazi9ORCID,Finkel Nancy8,Loureiro Joseph,Orth Anthony9ORCID,Seyfried Nicholas3ORCID,Levey Allan10ORCID,Ruiz Agustín11ORCID,Aspelund Thor1ORCID,Jennings Lori9ORCID,Launer Lenore12ORCID,Gudnason Vilmundur2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Iceland

2. Icelandic Heart Association

3. Emory University School of Medicine

4. Ace Alzheimer Center Barcelona

5. Emory University

6. Goizueta Alzheimer's Disease Research Center

7. Research Center and Memory Clinic of Fundació ACE, Institut Català de Neurociències Aplicades-UIC, Barcelona

8. Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research

9. Novartis

10. Emory

11. Fundació ACE

12. National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health

Abstract

Abstract The current demand for early intervention, prevention, and treatment of late onset Alzheimer’s disease (LOAD) warrants deeper understanding of the underlying molecular processes which could contribute to biomarker and drug target discovery. Utilizing high-throughput proteomic measurements in serum from a prospective population-based cohort of older adults (n = 5,294), we identified 303 unique proteins associated with incident LOAD (median follow-up 12.8 years). Over 40% of these proteins were associated with LOAD independently of APOE-ε4 carrier status. These proteins were implicated in neuronal processes and overlapped with protein signatures of LOAD in brain and cerebrospinal fluid. We found 17 proteins which LOAD-association was strongly dependent on APOE-ε4 carrier status. Most of them showed consistent associations with LOAD in cerebrospinal fluid and a third had brain-specific gene expression. Remarkably, four proteins in this group (TBCA, ARL2, S100A13 and IRF6) were downregulated by APOE-ε4 yet upregulated as a consequence of LOAD as determined in a bi-directional Mendelian randomization analysis, reflecting a potential response to the disease onset. Accordingly, the direct association of these proteins to LOAD was reversed upon APOE-ε4 genotype adjustment, a finding which we replicate in an external cohort (n = 719). Our findings provide an insight into the dysregulated pathways that may lead to the development and early detection of LOAD, including those both independent and dependent on APOE-ε4. Importantly, many of the LOAD-associated proteins we find in the circulation have been found to be expressed - and have a direct link with AD - in brain tissue. Thus, the proteins identified here, and their upstream modulating pathways, provide a new source of circulating biomarker and therapeutic target candidates for LOAD.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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