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Transdiagnostic Proteomic Changes in Neurodegeneration
Transdiagnostic Proteomic Changes in Neurodegeneration
Introduction
Transdiagnostic proteomics examines shared protein alterations across multiple neurodegenerative diseases, revealing common molecular pathways that transcend traditional diagnostic boundaries. Large-scale proteomic studies have identified conserved signatures in [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) (AD), [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease) (PD), and [frontotemporal dementia](/diseases/behavioral-variant-ftd) (FTD), suggesting common underlying mechanisms of neuronal vulnerability and glial dysfunction[@bai2023].
Shared Proteomic Signatures Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
Core Protein Alterations
Multiple studies have identified a core set of proteins consistently altered across neurodegenerative conditions:
```mermaid
flowchart TD
A["Shared Proteomic<br/>Signatures"] --> B["Immune/Inflammatory<br/>Proteins"]
A --> C["Synaptic Proteins"]
A --> D["Lysosomal/Autophagy<br/>Proteins"]
A --> E["Metabolic Enzymes"]
B --> B1["C3, C4, CFH<br/>Complement"]
B --> B2["TREM2, CD33<br/>Microglial"]
B --> B3["IL6, IL1beta<br/>Cytokines"]
C --> C1["SNAP25, SYN1<br/>Synaptic Vesicle"]
C --> C2["PSD95, GRIN1<br/>Postsynaptic"]
D --> D1["LAMP1/2, CTSB<br/>Lysosomal"]
D --> D2["ATG proteins<br/>Autophagy"]
E --> E1["GAPDH, Enolase<br/>Glycolysis"]
E --> E2["ATP5A, Complex I<br/>Mitochondrial"]
Transdiagnostic Proteomic Changes in Neurodegeneration
Introduction
Transdiagnostic proteomics examines shared protein alterations across multiple neurodegenerative diseases, revealing common molecular pathways that transcend traditional diagnostic boundaries. Large-scale proteomic studies have identified conserved signatures in [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) (AD), [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease) (PD), and [frontotemporal dementia](/diseases/behavioral-variant-ftd) (FTD), suggesting common underlying mechanisms of neuronal vulnerability and glial dysfunction[@bai2023].
Shared Proteomic Signatures Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
Core Protein Alterations
Multiple studies have identified a core set of proteins consistently altered across neurodegenerative conditions:
Disease-Specific vs. Shared Changes
While some protein changes are disease-specific, others represent a common "neurodegenerative proteomic signature"[@zhou2023]:
| Category | Shared Changes | Disease-Specific |
|----------|----------------|------------------|
| Immune | C3, C4, TREM2, complement factors | Disease-specific cytokine patterns |
| Synaptic | SNAP25, synaptophysin reduction | PSD95 alterations in AD |
| Lysosomal | LAMP1/2, cathepsins | GBA variants in PD |
| Metabolic | Glycolysis enzymes | Complex I in PD |
APOE ε4 Carrier Proteomic Signatures
The [APOE](/genes/apoe) ε4 allele represents the strongest genetic risk factor for AD and influences neurodegeneration across diagnostic categories. Proteomic studies have identified distinct signatures in ε4 carriers[@zhou2023a]:
Brain Tissue Proteomics
Key findings in APOE ε4 carriers:
- Complement system activation: Elevated C1Q, C3, and C4b in brain tissue and cerebrospinal fluid[@shi2017]
- Lipid metabolism dysregulation: Altered APOE, APOA1, and APOH levels
- Synaptic protein reductions: Enhanced vulnerability of postsynaptic density proteins
- TREM2-related microglial changes: Altered microglial activation patterns
Cerebrospinal Fluid Proteomics
CSF studies in APOE ε4 carriers reveal[@cruchaga2013]:
Transdiagnostic Effects
APOE ε4 effects extend beyond AD to[@tsuang2013]:
- Parkinson's disease: Earlier onset, more rapid progression
- FTD: Modified clinical presentation in some subtypes
- Lewy body dementia: Enhanced cortical Lewy body pathology
Immune-Related Proteomic Changes
Complement System Activation
The complement system represents a central hub of transdiagnostic proteomic changes[@morgan2021]:
Upregulated in multiple diseases:
- C1Q (classical pathway initiator)
- C3 (central complement component)
- C4 (alternative and classical pathways)
- CFH (complement factor H)
- Synaptic pruning dysregulation
- Microglial activation modulation
- Neuroinflammation amplification
Microglial-Associated Proteins
Proteomic studies consistently identify microglial alterations[@yeh2022]:
| Protein | AD | PD | FTD | Function |
|---------|----|----|-----|----------|
| TREM2 | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | Phagocytic receptor |
| CD33 | ↑ | Variable | ↑ | Siglec receptor |
| CX3CR1 | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | Fractalkine receptor |
| IBA1/AIF1 | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | Microglial marker |
Cytokine and Chemokine Alterations
Transdiagnostic cytokine signatures include[@chen2021]:
- Pro-inflammatory: IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α
- Chemokines: CCL2, CCL3, CXCL8
- Anti-inflammatory: IL-10, TGF-β (often dysregulated)
Cross-Disease Proteomic Networks
Network analysis reveals conserved molecular modules across neurodegenerative conditions[@seyfried2017]:
Module 1: Synaptic Dysfunction
Common to AD, PD, FTD, and ALS:
- SNAP25, SYN1, SYN2 reduction
- PSD95 (DLG4) alterations
- Neurogranin (RC3) changes
Module 2: Protein Quality Control
Shared autophagy/lysosome changes:
- LAMP1/2 alterations
- Cathepsin B/D dysregulation
- Ubiquitin-proteasome system changes
Module 3: Metabolic Dysfunction
Energy metabolism commonalities:
- Glycolysis enzyme alterations (GAPDH, enolase)
- Mitochondrial Complex I changes (especially PD)
- ATP synthase modifications
Module 4: Cytoskeletal Abnormalities
- Neurofilament light chain (NfL) elevation
- Alpha-synuclein modifications
- Tau protein alterations
Biomarker Implications
Transdiagnostic proteomic signatures have diagnostic and prognostic utility[@blennow2020]:
Current Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Cross-Disease Relevance |
|-----------|------------------------|
| Neurofilament light chain (NfL) | AD, PD, FTD, ALS |
| YKL-40 | AD, PD, FTD |
| TREM2 | AD, FTD |
| GFAP | AD, PD |
Emerging Targets
- phospho-tau species: Disease-specific patterns
- Alpha-synuclein: PD/DLB specific
- TDP-43: ALS/FTD specific
Therapeutic Implications
Understanding transdiagnostic proteomic changes identifies shared therapeutic targets[@zhang2024]:
Priority Targets
Precision Medicine Considerations
While shared mechanisms exist, disease-specific approaches remain important:
- APOE ε4 status modifies treatment responses
- Genetic subtypes (GBA, LRRK2, C9orf72) have distinct signatures
- Age at onset influences proteomic patterns
See Also
- [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [frontotemporal dementia](/diseases/behavioral-variant-ftd)
- [APOE](/genes/apoe)
External Links
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
- [KEGG Pathways](https://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html)
References
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
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