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Neurofascin - Biomarker for Axonal Integrity

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biomarker1131 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Neurofascin — Biomarker for Axonal Integrity

Overview

| Attribute | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| Category | Axonal Integrity Biomarker |
| Target | Neurofascin (NFASC) |
| Sample Type | CSF, Blood |
| Diseases | ALS, MS, PD, AD |
| Sensitivity | High |
| Specificity | Moderate |

Neurofascin is a neuronal cell adhesion molecule that plays a critical role in maintaining axonal integrity and saltatory conduction in myelinated neurons. It exists in multiple isoforms (NFASC155 and NFASC186) with distinct functions at the paranode and axonal initial segment (AIS). As a biomarker, neurofascin provides valuable insights into axonal damage across various neurodegenerative and demyelinating diseases[@howell2015][@santor2018].

Molecular Background

Neurofascin belongs to the L1 family of immunoglobulin superfamily cell adhesion molecules (L1-CAM). The protein contains six Ig-like domains, multiple fibronectin type III repeats, and a cytoplasmic tail that interacts with the cytoskeleton through ankyrin binding[@zhang2020]. This molecular architecture enables neurofascin to form critical stabilizing complexes at key axonal domains.

Isoforms

  • NFASC155: Major isoform at the paranode, forms critical complexes with contactin-1 and caspr to maintain the paranodal junction
  • NFASC186: Predominant at the axonal initial segment (AIS), partners with ankyrin-G to establish the AIS scaffold

Structural Domains


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