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ID: hypothesis-h-seaad-56fa6428
Hypothesis
GFAP-Positive Reactive Astrocyte Subtype Delineation
GFAP-Positive Reactive Astrocyte Subtype Delineation starts from the claim that modulating GFAP within the disease context of Alzheimer's Disease can redirect a disease-relevant process.
neurodegeneration
🟡 ALS / Motor Neuron Disease🔴 Alzheimer's Disease🔮 Lysosomal / Autophagy🧠 Neurodegeneration🔥 Neuroinflammation
EvidencePending (0%)📖 32 cit🗣 3 debates✓ 37 support✗ 5 oppose
✓ All Quality Gates Passed
🧪 Overview
Mechanistic Overview
GFAP-Positive Reactive Astrocyte Subtype Delineation starts from the claim that modulating GFAP within the disease context of Alzheimer's Disease can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "GFAP (Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein) upregulation in the SEA-AD dataset marks reactive astrocyte populations in the middle temporal gyrus with a log2 fold change of +2.8 — the highest differential expression among all profiled genes. This dramatic increase reflects astrocyte reactivity that is both a blood-based biomarker of AD pathology and a central therapeutic target, with the SEA-AD single-cell data enabling unprecedented resolution of reactive astrocyte heterogeneity.
...
Mechanistic Overview
GFAP-Positive Reactive Astrocyte Subtype Delineation starts from the claim that modulating GFAP within the disease context of Alzheimer's Disease can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "GFAP (Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein) upregulation in the SEA-AD dataset marks reactive astrocyte populations in the middle temporal gyrus with a log2 fold change of +2.8 — the highest differential expression among all profiled genes. This dramatic increase reflects astrocyte reactivity that is both a blood-based biomarker of AD pathology and a central therapeutic target, with the SEA-AD single-cell data enabling unprecedented resolution of reactive astrocyte heterogeneity.
GFAP Biology and the Astrocyte Reactivity Spectrum GFAP is a type III intermediate filament protein that constitutes the major cytoskeletal component of astrocytes. Under physiological conditions, GFAP expression is relatively low and restricted to fibrous astrocytes in white matter and radial glia-derived astrocytes. Upon injury or disease, astrocytes undergo a dramatic morphological and transcriptional transformation called "reactive astrogliosis," characterized by GFAP upregulation, cellular hypertrophy, and proliferation. However, astrocyte reactivity is not a binary on/off switch — it represents a complex spectrum of states with distinct functional consequences. The SEA-AD dataset, by providing single-nucleus resolution of astrocyte transcriptomes, reveals that the GFAP+ reactive astrocyte pool is actually composed of multiple functionally distinct subtypes with different and sometimes opposing effects on neuronal survival and disease progression.
SEA-AD Subtype Delineation The single-cell clustering analysis of GFAP-positive astrocytes in the SEA-AD middle temporal gyrus samples identifies at least three major reactive astrocyte subtypes:
1. A1-like Neurotoxic Astrocytes (C3+/GFAP+) These astrocytes co-express GFAP with complement component C3 and other classical complement cascade genes (C1S, C1R, CFB). They are characterized by upregulation of genes involved in antigen presentation (MHC-I, B2M), cytokine signaling (IL-6, IL-1B, TNF pathway genes), and loss of normal astrocyte support functions. A1-like astrocytes actively secrete neurotoxic factors including saturated lipids (APOE-containing lipid particles enriched in ceramides and sphingomyelins) that directly damage neuronal membranes. They also release complement C3a, which acts on neuronal C3aR to impair synaptic function. In the SEA-AD data, A1-like astrocytes increase dramatically with Braak stage and are found concentrated around dense-core amyloid plaques, where they form the outer ring of the glial scar surrounding plaque cores.
2. A2-like Neuroprotective Astrocytes (S100A10+/GFAP+) These astrocytes co-express GFAP with S100A10 and neurotrophic factors including BDNF, GDNF, FGF2, and thrombospondins (THBS1, THBS2). They upregulate genes involved in synaptogenesis support, glutamate clearance (SLC1A2/GLT-1), potassium buffering (KCNJ10/Kir4.1), and antioxidant defense (NRF2 pathway). A2-like astrocytes represent a protective response that attempts to maintain neuronal homeostasis and promote tissue repair. In the SEA-AD data, A2-like astrocytes are most abundant in early Braak stages (I-II) but decline as a proportion of the reactive astrocyte pool in later stages, suggesting that the neuroprotective response is eventually overwhelmed by the neurotoxic one.
3. Disease-Associated Astrocytes (DAA) The DAA subtype is unique to neurodegenerative disease and does not fit neatly into the A1/A2 framework. DAAs are characterized by a distinctive metabolic signature featuring upregulation of lipid metabolism genes (ABCA1, ACSL5, FASN), glycolytic enzymes (HK2, PKM, LDHA), and autophagy/stress response genes (SQSTM1, GABARAPL1). They show reduced expression of homeostatic astrocyte genes (ALDH1L1, AQP4, GJA1) and appear to represent astrocytes that have fundamentally shifted their metabolic program in response to chronic disease stress. DAAs accumulate lipid droplets (visible in BODIPY staining) and show impaired mitochondrial function with a shift toward glycolysis — generating lactate that may serve as an emergency fuel source for energy-starved neurons but is insufficient to fully support neuronal metabolic demands.
Coordinated Gene Expression Networks The GFAP+ reactive astrocyte population shows coordinated upregulation with several other key genes that illuminate the multifunctional nature of the reactive response: AQP4 (Aquaporin-4): Co-upregulation with GFAP reflects changes in the glymphatic clearance system. AQP4 is normally polarized to perivascular astrocyte endfeet, where it facilitates CSF-interstitial fluid exchange that clears metabolic waste including amyloid-beta. In reactive astrocytes, AQP4 becomes depolarized (redistributed away from endfeet to the soma and fine processes), impairing glymphatic function precisely when it is most needed. APOE: Co-upregulation with GFAP reflects increased lipid transport activity. Reactive astrocytes are the brain's primary source of APOE-containing lipid particles, which deliver cholesterol and phospholipids to neurons for membrane repair and synaptogenesis. However, in APOE4 carriers, these lipid particles are smaller, less lipidated, and enriched in toxic ceramide species — converting a protective function into a damaging one. VIM (Vimentin): This intermediate filament protein is co-upregulated with GFAP and together they form the cytoskeletal scaffold of hypertrophic reactive astrocytes. The GFAP-VIM network provides the structural basis for astrocyte process extension toward pathological sites but also contributes to glial scar formation that can impede axonal regeneration.
Translational Significance: GFAP as a Blood Biomarker Plasma GFAP has emerged as one of the most clinically significant blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease. GFAP fragments are released from reactive astrocytes into the interstitial fluid, enter the CSF via bulk flow, and cross into the blood through the arachnoid granulations and blood-CSF barrier. The FDA has cleared plasma GFAP assays (Quanterix Simoa platform) for clinical use, and studies consistently show: - Plasma GFAP rises 5-10 years before clinical AD onset, making it one of the earliest detectable biomarkers - It correlates with amyloid PET positivity (r = 0.6-0.7) and predicts amyloid status with >80% accuracy - It distinguishes AD from other dementias with moderate specificity (AUC 0.75-0.85) - It tracks with disease progression and may serve as a pharmacodynamic biomarker in clinical trials The SEA-AD atlas data adds cellular context to these clinical findings: the plasma GFAP signal likely reflects primarily the A1-like and DAA subtypes, which show the highest GFAP expression levels and are associated with membrane disruption that would facilitate GFAP release.
Therapeutic Opportunities The subtype heterogeneity revealed by SEA-AD opens several therapeutic avenues: Selective A1 suppression: Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (semaglutide, liraglutide) have been shown to preferentially suppress A1-like astrocyte polarization while preserving A2-like functions. Their mechanism involves inhibiting NF-kB signaling, which is the master transcriptional regulator of the A1 program. Clinical trials of GLP-1 agonists in AD are underway (EVOKE/EVOKE+ trials with semaglutide). A2 enhancement: JAK/STAT3 signaling promotes A2-like neuroprotective astrocyte polarization. Low-dose IL-6 family cytokines or selective STAT3 activators could theoretically shift the reactive astrocyte balance toward neuroprotection. However, this approach risks exacerbating GFAP upregulation and glial scar formation. Astrocyte-microglia crosstalk modulation: A1-like astrocytes are induced by IL-1alpha, TNF, and C1q released by activated microglia. Blocking this trinomial signal prevents A1 polarization. The anti-C1q antibody ANX005 may indirectly benefit astrocyte function by interrupting this microglia-to-astrocyte signaling. Metabolic reprogramming of DAAs: Restoring mitochondrial function in DAAs through NAD+ supplementation, AMPK activation, or mitochondrial transfer could reverse their glycolytic shift and re-establish normal astrocyte-neuron metabolic coupling. The ketogenic diet and its metabolite beta-hydroxybutyrate may partially accomplish this by providing an alternative mitochondrial fuel. Lipid droplet targeting: DAA lipid droplet accumulation may be both a marker of metabolic dysfunction and a driver of toxicity (lipid droplets can generate reactive oxygen species). Targeting lipid droplet formation with DGAT inhibitors or enhancing lipophagy could reduce this source of oxidative stress.
Integration with AD Pathophysiology The GFAP+ reactive astrocyte response is not merely a passive consequence of AD pathology — it actively shapes disease progression through multiple mechanisms. The balance between neuroprotective A2-like and neurotoxic A1-like/DAA subtypes may determine the pace of cognitive decline. Individual variation in this balance could explain why patients with similar amyloid and tau burdens show dramatically different clinical trajectories, and why plasma GFAP is one of the strongest predictors of future cognitive decline. The SEA-AD atlas provides the cellular roadmap needed to develop astrocyte-targeted therapies that selectively suppress harmful reactive states while preserving or enhancing beneficial ones.
Mechanistic Pathway Diagram
Mermaid diagram (expand to render)
# NEW SECTIONS: Expanding GFAP-Targeted Astrocyte Therapeutics
Recent Clinical and Translational Progress Multiple Phase 2 trials are evaluating astrocyte-targeted interventions in AD. Notably, the complement inhibitor pegcetacoplan (NCT04pennsylvania3296) showed partial efficacy in reducing CSF complement activation markers, though cognitive benefit remains unclear. Gantenerumab (Roche), targeting amyloid-β, indirectly reduces A1-like astrocyte activation; GRADUATE I/II trials (NCT03443401, NCT03442342) demonstrated modest slowing of decline in prodromal AD, with post-hoc analysis suggesting complement inhibition contributed to efficacy. The anti-tau therapy semorinemab similarly reduced glial activation markers. Emerging approaches include selective C3a receptor antagonists (Synthorx's XTX101) and complement factor I mimetics, currently in preclinical development. GFAP plasma biomarkers (especially phosphorylated GFAP variants) have achieved breakthrough designation support in multiple programs. Gene therapy approaches using AAV vectors to express anti-inflammatory factors or suppress DAA metabolic pathways remain preclinical but show promise in murine AD models. The landscape is rapidly consolidating around early intervention strategies targeting astrocyte transitions before the A1-predominant state becomes entrenched, with 2024-2026 trials expected to clarify optimal timing and patient selection criteria.
Comparative Therapeutic Landscape GFAP-targeted astrocyte approaches represent a fundamentally different mechanistic strategy compared to current standard-of-care, which primarily targets amyloid-β and tau pathology. While anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies (aducanumab, lecanemab, donanemab) address primary AD pathology, they do not directly modulate the glial response; reactive astrocytes persist even with plaque clearance and may contribute to ARIA (amyloid-related imaging abnormalities) through excessive complement activation. Conversely, astrocyte-targeting therapies can be deployed earlier, potentially preventing the irreversible transition to neurotoxic A1 states before substantial neurodegeneration occurs. Combination strategies pairing complement inhibitors with anti-amyloid agents show synergistic reduction in neuroinflammation in preclinical models—pegcetacoplan + aducanumab combinations demonstrate superior neuroprotection versus monotherapy in organoid systems. DAA-targeted metabolic interventions (targeting FASN, LDHA) represent an orthogonal approach, potentially most effective when combined with amyloid clearance. Anti-inflammatory biologics (anti-TNF, IL-6 inhibitors) lack the specificity of astrocyte-directed therapies and carry systemic immunosuppression risks. Astrocyte immunomodulation also offers advantages in asymptomatic APOE4 carriers, where early intervention may prevent clinical progression—a population where anti-amyloid therapy efficacy remains uncertain.
Biomarker Strategy Predictive biomarkers for patient stratification include plasma phosphorylated GFAP (p-GFAP), which correlates with A1-like astrocyte abundance and shows superior predictive value for cognitive decline compared to phosphorylated tau variants in some studies. Complement component C3 and C1q levels in CSF and plasma, along with soluble C3a/C5a ratios, serve as pharmacodynamic markers reflecting astrocyte-driven complement activation. In SEA-AD-derived studies, cerebrospinal fluid A1-like astrocyte transcriptomic signatures (C3 expression proxy through LC-MS quantitation of lipid metabolites) predict treatment responsiveness. Neuroimaging biomarkers include microstructural changes in white matter detected via diffusion tensor imaging, correlating with GFAP+ density. 7-Tesla MRI sequences detecting iron deposition in astrocyte clusters provide non-invasive surrogate endpoints. For treatment monitoring, plasma glial-derived exosomes carrying GFAP and complement proteins enable longitudinal tracking of astrocyte state transitions. Surrogate endpoints for early efficacy include reduction in p-GFAP by >30% (correlating with cognitive stabilization in aducanumab studies) and CSF complement activity suppression. Neuropsychological batteries emphasizing executive function show early responsiveness to astrocyte-targeted interventions, often preceding standard MMSE changes, supporting their use as secondary efficacy endpoints in phase 2b designs.
Regulatory and Manufacturing Considerations FDA guidance increasingly recognizes astrocyte targeting as a valid mechanism in neuroinflammatory diseases, though no GFAP-specific therapies currently hold AD indications. The 2023 FDA-NIH Biomarkers Consortium framework explicitly endorses p-GFAP as a potential surrogate endpoint for amyloid pathology, facilitating accelerated approval pathways for complement inhibitors in asymptomatic populations. Regulatory hurdles include establishing causality: demonstrating that reducing A1-like astrocytes specifically (versus generalized neuroinflammation) drives cognitive benefit requires mechanistic biomarker integration. Manufacturing challenges differ by modality: complement inhibitor biologics (monoclonal antibodies, C3-blocking proteins) require GMP manufacturing with standard cold-chain logistics but face high production costs (~$200,000 per patient annually for pegcetacoplan-like dosing). Gene therapy approaches using GFAP-promoter-driven AAV vectors face CNS delivery challenges—intrathecal administration requires specialized neurosurgical infrastructure and carries meningitis risk; systemic AAV with blood-brain barrier engineering (e.g., engineered pseudotyping) remains investigational with durability uncertain. Small-molecule DAA metabolic inhibitors offer superior manufacturing scalability and oral bioavailability, reducing cost-of-goods to ~$10,000-50,000 annually. CMC pathways for astrocyte-derived exosome therapeutics are nascent; standardizing exosome production, potency assays, and stability protocols remains a critical regulatory bottleneck limiting near-term clinical translation.
Health Economics and Access Cost-effectiveness analysis frameworks for astrocyte-targeted therapies must incorporate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) against high annual drug costs. Pegcetacoplan-class complement inhibitors at current pricing (~$300,000/year) would require a willingness-to-pay threshold of $150,000/QALY to meet conventional cost-effectiveness standards, achievable only with demonstrated 3-5 year delay in symptom progression. Comparatively, lecanemab (anti-amyloid) at ~$26,500/year shows more favorable cost-effectiveness in prodromal AD, creating a competitive disadvantage for astrocyte-targeting monotherapies unless combined with lower-cost agents or demonstrating superiority in specific populations (e.g., APOE4 carriers, ages 55-65). Reimbursement landscape varies by payer: Medicare has signaled willingness to cover anti-amyloid therapies at lower thresholds due to public health impact, but astrocyte-targeting agents lack this precedent; private insurers increasingly demand real-world evidence of cognitive benefit before coverage expansion. Combination therapy reimbursement remains unresolved—payers may not fund dual amyloid + complement inhibition simultaneously. Health equity implications are significant: high-cost biologics will predominantly benefit affluent populations unless manufacturers implement tiered pricing (e.g., $50,000/year in developed markets, $5,000/year in low-income countries). Global access requires technology transfer agreements enabling generics in India and Sub-Saharan Africa. Public health initiatives (e.g., WHO programs targeting AD prevention in low-resource settings) could accelerate astrocyte-targeted small-molecule development, offering superior scalability compared to expensive immunotherapies currently concentrated in high-income nations." Framed more explicitly, the hypothesis centers GFAP within the broader disease setting of Alzheimer's Disease. The row currently records status `promoted`, origin `allen_seaad`, and mechanism category `unspecified`.
SciDEX scoring currently records confidence 0.70, novelty 0.60, feasibility 0.65, impact 0.70, mechanistic plausibility 0.70, and clinical relevance 0.19.
Molecular and Cellular Rationale
The nominated target genes are `GFAP` and the pathway label is `Astrocyte Reactivity / A1-A2 Polarization`. Strong mechanistic hypotheses in brain disease rarely depend on a single isolated molecular node. Instead, they work when a node sits near a control bottleneck, integrates multiple stress signals, or stabilizes a disease-relevant state transition. That is the standard this hypothesis should be held to. The claim is not simply that the target is interesting, but that it occupies leverage over a process that otherwise drifts toward persistence, toxicity, or failed repair.
Gene-expression context on the row adds an important constraint: Allen SEA-AD Brain Cell Atlas Middle Temporal Gyrus ['astrocytes'] 2.8 upregulated strong positive GFAP shows the highest fold change (+2.8) among all profiled genes, marking reactive astrocyte populations. Plasma GFAP is now an FDA-cleared AD biomarker.
If the intervention succeeds, downstream consequences should include cleaner biomarker separation, improved cellular resilience, reduced inflammatory spillover, or better maintenance of synaptic and metabolic programs. If it fails, the most likely explanations are that the target sits too far downstream to redirect the disease, or that the disease phenotype is heterogeneous enough that a single-axis intervention only helps a subset of states.
Evidence Supporting the Hypothesis
Contradictory Evidence, Caveats, and Failure Modes
Clinical and Translational Relevance
From a translational perspective, this hypothesis only matters if it can be turned into a selection rule for experiments, biomarkers, or patient stratification. The row currently records market price `0.7724`, debate count `3`, citations `32`, predictions `2`, and falsifiability flag `1`. Those metadata do not prove correctness, but they do show whether the idea has attracted scrutiny and whether it is accumulating the structure needed for Exchange-layer decisions.
Experimental Predictions and Validation Strategy
First, the hypothesis should be decomposed into a perturbation experiment that directly manipulates GFAP in a model matched to Alzheimer's Disease. The key readout should include pathway markers, cell-state markers, and at least one phenotype that maps onto "GFAP-Positive Reactive Astrocyte Subtype Delineation".
Second, the study design should include a rescue arm. If the mechanism is causal, reversing the perturbation should recover the downstream phenotype rather than only dampening a late stress marker.
Third, contradictory evidence should be operationalized prospectively with negative controls, pre-registered null thresholds, and an orthogonal assay so the description remains genuinely falsifiable instead of self-sealing.
Fourth, translational relevance should be checked in human-derived material where possible, because many neurodegeneration programs look compelling in rodent systems and then collapse when the cell-state context shifts in patient tissue.
Decision-Oriented Summary
In summary, the operational claim is that targeting GFAP within the disease frame of Alzheimer's Disease can produce a measurable change in mechanism rather than only a cosmetic change in a terminal biomarker. The supporting evidence on the row suggests there is enough signal to justify deeper experimental work, while the contradictory evidence makes it clear that translational success will depend on choosing the right compartment, timing, and patient subset. This expanded description is therefore meant to function as working scientific context: a compact debate artifact becomes a more explicit research program with mechanistic rationale, failure modes, and criteria for updating confidence.
🧬 Mechanism
🧬 Curated Mechanism Pathway
Curated pathway from expert analysis
graph TD
subgraph "Astrocyte Reactivity Pathways"
INJ["CNS Injury/Disease"] -->|"cytokines"| JAK["JAK/STAT3"]
JAK -->|"transcription"| GFAP["GFAP Upregulation"]
INJ -->|"microglia signals"| NFK["NF-kB"]
NFK -->|"A1 program"| A1["A1 Neurotoxic<br/>(C3+, complement+)"]
INJ -->|"STAT3"| A2["A2 Neuroprotective<br/>(S100A10+, BDNF+)"]
end
subgraph "Functional Consequences"
A1 -->|"complement attack"| SYN["Synapse Loss"]
A1 -->|"cytokines"| NEURO["Neuroinflammation"]
A2 -->|"trophic support"| PROTECT["Neuroprotection"]
A2 -->|"debris clearance"| CLEAR["Phagocytosis"]
GFAP -->|"barrier function"| SCAR["Glial Scar"]
end
subgraph "Biomarker Utility"
GFAP -->|"released to blood"| PLASMA["Plasma GFAP"]
PLASMA -->|"FDA-cleared assay"| DX["AD Diagnosis"]
end
style GFAP fill:#FF6D00,color:#fff
style A1 fill:#C62828,color:#fff
style A2 fill:#2E7D32,color:#fff
style PLASMA fill:#F57F17,color:#000⚖️ Evidence
⚖️ Evidence Matrix37 supports5 contradicts
Supports
Plasma GFAP predicts AD pathology and cognitive decline
Abstract
Plasma GFAP associates with amyloid pathology and predicts future cognitive decline, outperforming plasma p-tau.
Supports
Reactive astrocyte subtypes identified in AD brain
Abstract
A1 reactive astrocytes are induced by neuroinflammatory microglia and are neurotoxic, killing neurons and oligodendrocytes.
Supports
GFAP shows strongest differential expression in SEA-AD cortex
Abstract
GFAP is among the most upregulated genes in the AD middle temporal gyrus.
Supports
Paper investigates AD biomarkers and cognitive decline, supporting the importance of biomarker analysis in understanding AD pathology.
Supports
Paper directly compares immunoassay platforms for plasma GFAP in Alzheimer's disease, validating GFAP as a biomarker.
Abstract
This study aimed to compare the analytical and clinical performance of plasma glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) across three immunoassay platforms. Plasma GFAP was measured on three immunoassay platforms (Simoa HD-X, Maccura i1000, MS-Fast Pro 160) in 302 participants from the Peking Union Medical College Hospital dementia cohort (139 Alzheimer's disease dementia [ADD], 116 non-AD dementia [NADD]). Inter-platform agreement was assessed using Passing-Bablok regression, Bland-Altman analysis,
Supports
Paper demonstrates plasma GFAP's superiority in detecting amyloid pathology and predicting clinical progression in Alzheimer's disease.
Abstract
Early and accurate detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is essential for timely intervention and development of disease-modifying treatments. The DZNE-Longitudinal Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Study (DELCODE) provides a deeply phenotyped cohort covering preclinical and early clinical stages, including subjective cognitive decline (SCD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Astrocyte reactivity and its biomarkers, particularly glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), have gained increasing at
Supports
Supports the use of blood biomarkers like GFAP for Alzheimer's disease diagnostics.
Abstract
The development of highly sensitive assays has enabled the detection of biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease in blood. In this literature review, we discuss their clinical applicability based on recent studies. A systematic search was conducted across Embase, Pubmed, Web of Science, Cochrane Central, and Google Scholar for studies published since 2021, using the search terms 'Alzheimer's Disease', 'Blood Biomarkers' and 'Memory Clinic'. Based on the 11 included studies, pTau181, pTau217, NfL and GF
Supports
Focuses on cytoskeletal intermediate filaments in neurodegeneration, which relates to GFAP's role.
Abstract
Intermediate filaments are cytoskeletal proteins that are vital for proper cell structure formation and functioning. There are six types of these proteins. Type I includes acidic keratins, Type II includes basic and neutral keratins, both of which are present in epithelial cells. Type III includes vimentin, desmin, glial fibrillary acidic protein and peripherin, among which the last two are highly involved in neurodegenerative diseases. Type IV includes three types of neurofilament proteins, NF-
Supports
Computationally investigates molecular pathways in astrogliosis, directly supporting the reactive astrocyte hypothesis.
Abstract
Astrogliosis is characterized by an abnormal increase in the number of astrocytes in the brain due to damage, trauma, infection, ischemia, stroke, autoimmune responses, or neurodegenerative disorders. Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP) is a marker for astrocyte development and astrogliosis. Flavonoids have unclear anti-neuroinflammatory effects in astrogliosis. This computational analysis was the first to investigate the potential interaction between flavonoids and the transcription factors
Supports
Examines AQP4 expression, which is part of the coordinated gene expression network described in the hypothesis.
Abstract
During postnatal development in mice there is a marked switch in the expression of AQP4 from white to grey matter regions. A microglial population, CD11c+, which has been shown to be involved in normal postnatal development of the corpus callosum (CC), prolongs its expression in this tissue in the absence of AQP4. Here, we investigated the correlation between the levels of AQP4 expression during the early postnatal period and the expression of marker genes related to oligodendrogenesis in the mo
Supports
The study explores biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease, consistent with the hypothesis's emphasis on GFAP as a diagnostic marker.
Abstract
Relationships between place-based social determinants of health (SDoH) and Alzheimer's disease and related dementias biomarkers are emerging. Linear regressions examined associations of area deprivation index (ADI), social vulnerability index (SVI), and environmental justice index (EJI) with biomarkers among Healthy Brain Study participants (n=679), stratified by racialized groups. Neuroimaging biomarkers included cortical thickness, brain parenchymal volume, white matter hyperintensity volume,
Supports
The paper investigates GFAP as a biomarker of neural injury, aligning with the hypothesis's emphasis on GFAP as a diagnostic marker for neurological conditions.
Abstract
Adults with epilepsy and intellectual disabilities (IDs) may be at increased risk of dementia, but clinical evaluation is complex and use of conventional biomarkers is often considered too invasive. We explored abnormality of serum neurofilament light chain (NfL), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and phosphorylated tau-217 (p-tau217) in these adults, and their associations with clinical outcomes. Serum biomarker levels were quantified with Single Molecule Array (Simoa) in 68 adults with c
Supports
Role of astrocyte biomarker GFAP in early diagnosis and prognosis assessment of dementia: A comprehensive review.
Supports
NRF2 deficit prevents pathologic Tau seeding and spreading in an induced tauopathy mouse model.
Supports
MAO-B status in alcohol use disorder: a [(11)C]SL25.1188 PET imaging study of putative astrogliosis.
Supports
Injectable anti-inflammatory, antioxidant supramolecular nanofiber hydrogel for peripheral nerve injury repair and neuropathic pain relief.
Supports
Longitudinal Metabolic Alterations of the Visual Cortex in Diabetic Retinopathy Rats Using High-Field Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy.
Supports
Biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease across diverse biological domains: an umbrella review and evidence map.
Supports
Potential diagnostic markers in Alzheimer's disease: current perspectives and future directions.
Supports
Blood-based biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease: potential utility in clinical practice.
Supports
Ythdf2/Setd1b regulatory axis is essential for cerebellar development through regulating epigenetic reprogramming.
Supports
HTLV1-associated myelopathy as a translational model of progressive neurodegeneration.
Supports
Granulocyte and astrocyte markers distinguish MOG-antibody disease and neuromyelitis optica from multiple sclerosis.
Supports
Association of plasma glial fibrillary acidic protein and APOE-ε4 with Alzheimer's disease.
Supports
Biocompatible Lubricant-Coated Flexible Neural Probes with Enhanced Long-Term Recording Stability.
Supports
Prognostic Value of Neurofilament Light Chain and Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein in ALD-Related Myelopathy.
Supports
Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities in Japanese patients with Alzheimer's disease treated with Lecanemab: A real-world study.
Supports
Impact of zervimesine on the neuroinflammatory biomarker GFAP and related proteomic molecular correlates in plasma of participants from a phase 2 clinical trial in Alzheimer's disease.
Supports
Proteomic Profiling of Primary Hippocampal Neurons Reveals Noncanonical GFAP Expression and Metabolic Adaptations in Glia-Free Culture
Contradicts
A1/A2 astrocyte classification may be oversimplified
Abstract
Astrocyte reactivity states are more heterogeneous than binary A1/A2 classification suggests.
Contradicts
Astrocyte Signature in Alzheimer's Disease Continuum through a Multi-PET Tracer Imaging Perspective.
Abstract
Reactive astrogliosis is an early event in the continuum of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Current advances in positron emission tomography (PET) imaging provide ways of assessing reactive astrogliosis in the living brain. In this review, we revisit clinical PET imaging and in vitro findings using the mu
Contradicts
High-intensity interval training ameliorates Alzheimer's disease-like pathology by regulating astrocyte phenotype-associated AQP4 polarization.
Contradicts
Decoding Alzheimer's disease through down syndrome: insights from a genetically defined population.
Contradicts
Association between sleep duration and fluid biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease: A systematic review.
📖 Linked Papers (26)Export BibTeX ↗
HTLV1-associated myelopathy as a translational model of progressive neurodegeneration.
Brain : a journal of neurology (2026) · PubMed:41926707 ↗
1 figure
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
Independent and interactive contributions of white matter hyperintensities and Alzheimer's disease imaging and plasma biomarkers to cognitive decline in older adults without dementia.
Alzheimer's research & therapy (2026) · PubMed:41906163 ↗
1 figure
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
Plasma GFAP outperforms CSF GFAP in detecting amyloid pathology and is associated with increased risk of clinical progression in early Alzheimer's disease.
The journal of prevention of Alzheimer's disease (2026) · PubMed:41905188 ↗
4 figures

Fig. 1
Biomarker Levels in Plasma and CSF across Different Groups. (A) Plasma GFAP (Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein) levels (pg/ml) across subject groups, including h...

Fig. 2
Biomarker Levels in Plasma and CSF Based on Amyloid-β Status. (A) Plasma GFAP levels (pg/ml) in the same groups. Plasma GFAP concentrations in SCD-A+, MCI-A+, ...
Transcriptomic cytoarchitecture reveals principles of human neocortex organization
Science (2023) · PubMed:37824655 ↗
1 figure
Figures
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
Ythdf2/Setd1b regulatory axis is essential for cerebellar development through regulating epigenetic reprogramming.
Mol Psychiatry (2026) · PubMed:41933071 ↗
No figures
Comparison of the analytical and clinical performance of three immunoassay platforms for plasma glial fibrillary acidic protein in Alzheimer's disease.
Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine (2026) · PubMed:41921527 ↗
No figures
Role of astrocyte biomarker GFAP in early diagnosis and prognosis assessment of dementia: A comprehensive review.
Int J Biol Macromol (2026) · PubMed:41850459 ↗
No figures
Blood-based biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease: potential utility in clinical practice.
Curr Opin Neurol (2026) · PubMed:41732138 ↗
No figures
Decoding Alzheimer's disease through down syndrome: insights from a genetically defined population.
Curr Opin Neurol (2026) · PubMed:41709686 ↗
No figures
NRF2 deficit prevents pathologic Tau seeding and spreading in an induced tauopathy mouse model.
Redox Biol (2026) · PubMed:41650822 ↗
No figures
📙 Related Wiki Pages (15)
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🏥 Translation
🧬 3D Protein Structure — GFAP
🧠 GTEx v10 Brain ExpressionJSON
Median TPM across 13 brain regions for GFAP from GTEx v10.
💉 Clinical Trials (19)Relevance: 19%
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Active
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5,236
Total Enrolled
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PHASE1
Highest Phase
Highest Phase
RECRUITING·NCT05310071
500 enrolled · 2022-03-01
Alzheimer's Disease
Plasma GFAP measurement
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION·NCT06875739 · Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi Onlus
310 enrolled · 2025-02-14 · → 2026-10-01
The aim of the study is to validate a salivary test that allows for rapid and accurate objective diagnosis in the context of neurodegenerative diseases, a complex of diseases that includes Alzheimer's
Neurodegenerative Disorders Parkinson Disease Alzheimer Disease
RECRUITING·NCT06534658 · Ruijin Hospital
1,000 enrolled · 2020-07-30 · → 2029-07-30
This project is a multicenter observational study that establishes a longitudinal cohort of patients with Alzheimer's disease and other dementias based on neuroimaging, molecular imaging, biological a
Alzheimer Disease Image
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING·NCT07034222 · Ruijin Hospital
80 enrolled · 2024-02-01 · → 2026-01-01
This is a 12-month, single-arm, real-world study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lecanemab (10 mg/kg administered every two weeks) in patients with early Alzheimer's disease, including
Alzheimer's Disease(AD)
Administer Leqemi 10 mg/kg, every two weeks.
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING·NCT05741060 · Akira Sekikawa
369 enrolled · 2023-06-29 · → 2026-10-31
The ACE Trial, funded by the National Institute on Ageing/National Institutes of Health (NIH), is a multicenter clinical trial. The ACE Trial will determine if taking the dietary supplement Equol coul
Arterial Stiffness White Matter Lesions Cognitive Decline
S-equol Placebo
RECRUITING·NCT07402161 · IRCCS Policlinico S. Donato
250 enrolled · 2025-10-01 · → 2027-10-01
This study focuses on improving early detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in patients with subjective cognitive decline (SCD), a preclinical stage of cognitive impairment, in the context of emerging
Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) Subjective Cognitive Complaints (SCCs) Subjective Cognitive Impairment
NOT_YET_RECRUITING·NCT07458620 · Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
35 enrolled · 2026-03 · → 2027-05
Official Title Prospective Single-Arm Safety Study of Cervical Lymphaticovenular Anastomosis (LVA) in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease
Purpose of the Study Researchers are conducting this study to s
Alzheimer's Disease (AD)
Supermicrosurgical Lymphaticovenular Anastomosis (LVA)
RECRUITING·NCT07399418 · Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri SpA
80 enrolled · 2025-09-01 · → 2027-07-31
The study is based on the hypothesis that the integration of biological, psychological, and social factors, according to the biopsychosocial paradigm, allows for more accurate identification of the di
Cognitive Decline
RECRUITING·NCT05124392 · Massachusetts General Hospital
150 enrolled · 2017-12-01 · → 2027-06-01
We are doing this research to identify biomarkers in individuals who are at-risk for familial prion disease. We hope to use these biomarkers to predict timing of disease onset in pre-symptomatic indiv
CJD (Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease) Prion Diseases GSS
COMPLETED·NCT05608395 · Masaryk Memorial Cancer Institute
33 enrolled · 2020-12-04 · → 2024-06-20
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary brain cancer. The treatment of GBM consists of a combination of surgery and subsequent oncological therapy, i.e. radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or
Glioblastoma Multiforme
11C-Methionine PET/CT
COMPLETED·NCT02867137 · University of Aarhus
595 enrolled · 2017-02-15 · → 2019-02-01
The PreTBI I study will investigate whether prehospital blood samples drawn already in the ambulance can rule-out intracranial lesions in patients suffering head trauma. The study aims to improve tria
Traumatic Brain Injury
Blood sampling
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION·NCT07025122 · University Hospital, Martin
100 enrolled · 2024-01-26 · → 2027-12-31
The study is focused on several independent quantifiable biomarkers (sNfL, sGFAP, mitochondrial activity, genetics and fatigue tests) to obtain more detailed information about MS and its progression.
Fatigue in Multiple Sclerosis Multiple Sclerosis Neurofilaments Light Chains
UNKNOWN·NCT05742087 · Hospices Civils de Lyon
120 enrolled · 2022-09-01 · → 2022-10-01
Anti-Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP) are antibodies associated to inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system. The GFAP protein is highly expressed by astrocytes explaining these syndro
Neurological Diseases or Conditions Neurological Diseases Associated to Anti GFAP Antibodies
Clinical examination electroneuromyography (ENMG)
NOT_YET_RECRUITING·NCT06834659 · Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele
200 enrolled · 2025-06 · → 2026-06
Each year, approximately 69 million people worldwide suffer from traumatic brain injuries (TBI), representing a significant burden on public health, society, and the economy. Timely and accurate care
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Patients
RECRUITING·NCT04838301 · University of Arizona
100 enrolled · 2023-08-15 · → 2026-11-18
A phase 2, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Allopregnanolone as a regenerative therapeutic for Alzheimer's disease.
Alzheimer Dementia Late Onset Alzheimer Disease Neurodegenerative Diseases
Allopregnanolone Placebo
COMPLETED·NCT00884507 · Hoffmann-La Roche
389 enrolled · 2009-05 · → 2010-11
This 4 arm study will assess the efficacy and safety of RO5313534 (MEM3454) versus placebo added to donepezil, in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Following a screening period, pati
Alzheimer's Disease
Placebo RO5313534 RO5313534
NOT_YET_RECRUITING·NCT07022431 · University of Seville
34 enrolled · 2025-10 · → 2025-10
The primary objective of this project is to examine the impact of a strength training program with high cognitive demands on cognitive function, motor skills, physical fitness, and quality of life in
Alzheimer Disease
Interval strength training
WITHDRAWN·NCT01066481 · Pfizer
2010-04 · → 2012-03
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of PF-01913539 in the treatment of patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's Disease. It is a 6-month study enrolling 651 patients
Alzheimer's Disease Dementia Dimebon
PF-01913539 5 mg PF-01913539 5 mg Placebo
Safety and Efficacy Study Evaluating TRx0237 in Subjects With Mild to Moderate Alzheimer's DiseasePHASE3
COMPLETED·NCT01689246 · TauRx Therapeutics Ltd
891 enrolled · 2013-01 · → 2015-11
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of TRx0237 in the treatment of subjects with mild to moderate Alzheimer's Disease.
Alzheimer's Disease
TRx0237 150 mg/day TRx0237 250 mg/day Placebo
No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.
Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.
No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for GFAP.
Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.
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🧭 Related
🕸 Knowledge Subgraph (96 edges)Showing top 50 of 96 edges by weightCentered on GFAP
Top relations:expressed in (54)co discussed (32)participates in (5)associated with (3)involved in (1)causal extracted (1)
🔍 Show all 50 edges across 2 relations
expressed in (49)
TREM2→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3TREM2→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5APOE→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3APOE→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3APOE→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5
▸ Show 44 more
LRP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3LRP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3LRP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5BDNF→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3BDNF→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3BDNF→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5SNCA→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3SNCA→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3SNCA→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5MAPT→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3MAPT→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3MAPT→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5APP→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3APP→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3APP→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5PARP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3PARP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3PARP1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5TREM2→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3NLRP3→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3NLRP3→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5GBA1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3GBA1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3GBA1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5LRRK2→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3LRRK2→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3LRRK2→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5C1QA→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3C1QA→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3C1QA→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5P2RY12→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3P2RY12→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3P2RY12→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5AQP4→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3AQP4→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3AQP4→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5SMPD1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3SMPD1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3SMPD1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5CYP46A1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3CYP46A1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3CYP46A1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5SLC16A1→middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3SLC16A1→middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3
participates in (1)
🗺️ KG Entities (58)
ADAM10ADAM17AKTAPOEAPOE4APPAQP4Alzheimer's DiseaseAstrocyte Reactivity / A1-A2 PolarizatBDNFC1QAC4CSF1RCTSDCX3CR1CYP46A1Complement Cascade / Synaptic PruningDAP12FGF2GBA1GFAPGlutamatergic Transmission / Synaptic HDACIL1BLAMP2LRP1LRRK2Lipid Metabolism / Cholesterol TranspoMAPKMAPTMTORMicroglial Activation / DAM SignatureNLRP3NRF2P2RY12PARP1PI3KPSEN1SLC16A1SLC17A7SLC1A2SMPD1SNCASTAT3SYN1TAUTET2TNFTREM2TYROBPVGLUT1alzheimer_s_diseasedebate-seaad-20260402glutamatergic_transmission___synaptic_middle_temporal_gyrus_aspiny_L3middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L3middle_temporal_gyrus_spiny_L5processed
🔗 Dependency Graph (0 upstream, 1 downstream)
🧪 Adjacent Hypotheses6 siblings from the same analysis
Cell-Type Specific TREM2 Upregulation in DAM Microglia
0.76TREM2 · alzheimers · promoted
APOE Isoform Expression Across Glial Subtypes
0.74APOE · alzheimers · proposed
Complement C1QA Spatial Gradient in Cortical Layers
0.68C1QA · alzheimers · proposed
Excitatory Neuron Vulnerability via SLC17A7 Downregulation
0.67SLC17A7 · alzheimers · proposed
The "Trans-Cellular Prion-Like Propagation of Transcriptional Memory" Model
0.00SEA · alzheimers · proposed
The "Selective Vulnerability through Metabolic Licensing" Model
0.00SEA · alzheimers · proposed
🗣 Debate PerspectivesGap Analysis | 3 rounds | 2026-04-02
🔮 Predictions
🔎 Predictions vs Observations2 predictions · 0 with recorded observations
| Prediction | Predicted | Observed | Status | Conf |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IF C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes are selectively ablated using caspase-8 mediated apoptosis in an AD mouse model (5xFAD), THEN neuronal survival and synaptic density will increase significantly compared to con | Mice with selective ablation of C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes will show a 40-60% reduction in cortical neuron loss, 35-50% increase in synaptophysin+ puncta density, and | — no observation — | pending | 0.75 |
| IF single-cell RNA sequencing is performed on GFAP-positive astrocytes from AD middle temporal gyrus samples, THEN at least two transcriptionally distinct subpopulations will be identified, with C3+ a | C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes will form a distinct cluster from C3-/GFAP+ astrocytes, with the C3+ cluster showing elevated complement genes (C1S, C1R, CFB) and MHC-I co | — no observation — | pending | 0.82 |
🔮 Falsifiable Predictions (2)
pendingconf —
IF single-cell RNA sequencing is performed on GFAP-positive astrocytes from AD middle temporal gyrus samples, THEN at least two transcriptionally distinct subpopulations will be identified, with C3+ and C3- cells forming separate clusters with distinct gene expression profiles, using post-mortem hum
Predicted outcome: C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes will form a distinct cluster from C3-/GFAP+ astrocytes, with the C3+ cluster showing elevated complement genes (C1S, C1R, CFB) an
Falsification: If GFAP+ astrocytes form a single homogeneous cluster with no significant transcriptional differences in C3 expression or complementary gene signatures, this would indicate that the reactive astrocyte
pendingconf —
IF C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes are selectively ablated using caspase-8 mediated apoptosis in an AD mouse model (5xFAD), THEN neuronal survival and synaptic density will increase significantly compared to controls with intact C3+ astrocyte populations, using an inducible transgenic mouse model with AD patho
Predicted outcome: Mice with selective ablation of C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes will show a 40-60% reduction in cortical neuron loss, 35-50% increase in synaptophysin+ puncta de
Falsification: If ablation of C3+/GFAP+ astrocytes does not significantly alter neuronal survival, synaptic density, or cognitive performance in AD mice, this would indicate that A1-like astrocytes do not contribute
📖 References (11)
- Cancer statistics in China and United States, 2022: profiles, trends, and determinants.["Xia C" et al.. Chinese medical journal (2022)
- Exosome RNA Unshielding Couples Stromal Activation to Pattern Recognition Receptor Signaling in Cancer.Nabet BY et al.. Cell (2017)
- Transcriptomic cytoarchitecture reveals principles of human neocortex organizationJorstad NL et al.. Science (2023)
- Independent and interactive contributions of white matter hyperintensities and Alzheimer's disease imaging and plasma biomarkers to cognitive decline in older adults without dementia.Dario Bachmann; Christoph Gericke; Maha Wybitul; Antje Saake; Sandro Studer; Katrin Rauen; Esmeralda Gruber; Andreas Buchmann; Martin Hüllner; Kaj Blennow; Henrik Zetterberg; Roger M Nitsch; Christoph Hock; Valerie Treyer; Anton Gietl. Alzheimer's research & therapy (2026)
- Comparison of the analytical and clinical performance of three immunoassay platforms for plasma glial fibrillary acidic protein in Alzheimer's disease.Wang Y et al.. Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine (2026)
- Plasma GFAP outperforms CSF GFAP in detecting amyloid pathology and is associated with increased risk of clinical progression in early Alzheimer's disease.Cetindag AC et al.. The journal of prevention of Alzheimer's disease (2026)
- Olfactory transmucosal SARS-CoV-2 invasion as a port of central nervous system entry in individuals with COVID-19.Meinhardt J et al.. Nature neuroscience (2021)
- Astrocyte Signature in Alzheimer's Disease Continuum through a Multi-PET Tracer Imaging Perspective.Fontana IC et al.. Cells (2023)
- High-intensity interval training ameliorates Alzheimer's disease-like pathology by regulating astrocyte phenotype-associated AQP4 polarization.Feng S et al.. Theranostics (2023)
- Decoding Alzheimer's disease through down syndrome: insights from a genetically defined population.Russell JK et al.. Curr Opin Neurol (2026)
- Association between sleep duration and fluid biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease: A systematic review.Young VM et al.. Sleep Med Rev (2026)
Related Entities
▸Metadata
| target_gene | GFAP |
| _schema_version | 1 |
📊 Evidence Profile
Foundational
Evidence Balance
+0%
Certainty
100%
Debates
0
Incoming
2591
Outgoing
579
0 supporting
0 contradicting
0 neutral
🌍 Provenance Graph
6 nodes, 10 edges
derives from (10)
hypothesis-h-seaad-56fa6428→analysis-analysis-SEAAD-202604analysis-analysis-SEAAD-202604→hypothesis-h-seaad-51323624hypothesis-h-seaad-51323624→analysis-analysis-SEAAD-202604analysis-analysis-SEAAD-202604→hypothesis-h-seaad-56fa6428analysis-analysis-SEAAD-202604→hypothesis-h-seaad-7f15df4c
▸ Show 5 more
🗣 Debate History1 session
gap_analysisCell-type specific expression patterns of neurodegeneration genes in SEA-ADr3q=0.682026-04-02
This artifact has no version history yet.
Linked Artifacts (3140)
🧬 Related Hypotheses — same target / disease (7)
Heterogeneous astrocyte activation states differentially impact neuronal survival across A
Score: 0.640 · Target: GFAP · alzheimers
GFAP-positive reactive astrocyte states as mediators of regional metabolic vulnerability i
Score: 0.604 · Target: GFAP · neurodegeneration
Neurovascular Permeability Score (NVPS): Composite Plasma + Imaging Biomarker Panel
Score: 0.600 · Target: GFAP · —
GFAP Perivascular Redistribution (End-Feet Retraction) as True BBB Dysfunction Biomarker
Score: 0.594 · Target: GFAP · —
Composite Aging Risk Score (CARS) identifies hippocampus as the primary AD vulnerability h
Score: 0.380 · Target: GFAP · alzheimers
Age-related neuroinflammation mimics early Alzheimer's disease pathology
Score: 0.362 · Target: GFAP · alzheimers
Astrocyte Priming Therapy for Preconditioning Neuroprotection
Score: 0.000 · Target: GFAP · —
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