ID: h-SDA-2026-04-26-gap-20260426-002803-01-
Hypothesis

Circulating Soluble PDGFRβ Reflects Pericyte Loss and Precedes Cognitive Decline in Neurodegeneration

Soluble PDGFRβ (sPDGFRβ) is released into the bloodstream upon pericyte damage, serving as a peripheral indicator of blood-brain barrier (BBB) pericyte coverage loss.
🧬 PDGFRβ🎯 Composite 74%💱 $0.56▼17.0%proposed
neurodegeneration
EvidencePending (0%)📖 8 cit🗣 1 debates 8 support 3 oppose
✓ All Quality Gates Passed
Mechanistic 0.80 (15%) Evidence 0.27 (15%) Novelty 0.40 (12%) Feasibility 0.49 (12%) Impact 0.00 (12%) Druggability 0.00 (10%) Safety 0.47 (8%) Competition 0.00 (6%) Data Avail. 0.10 (5%) Reproducible 0.70 (5%) KG Connect 0.50 (8%) 0.745 composite
🏆 ChallengeResolve: Plasma sPDGFRβ as Early BBB Pericyte Loss Biomarker Predicting Cognitiv$500K →

🧪 Overview

Soluble PDGFRβ (sPDGFRβ) is released into the bloodstream upon pericyte damage, serving as a peripheral indicator of blood-brain barrier (BBB) pericyte coverage loss. Elevated plasma sPDGFRβ correlates with BBB leakage and cognitive decline trajectories. The mechanism involves ADAM10/ADAM17-mediated ectodomain shedding of PDGFRβ from damaged pericytes. This hypothesis has the strongest evidence base with human validation in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia cohorts. Specificity concerns regarding peripheral PDGFRβ+ cell sources (vascular smooth muscle cells, hepatic stellate cells) are addressable through cell-type-specific validation studies and parallel peripheral biomarker controls.

🧬 Mechanism

🧬 Curated Mechanism Pathway

Curated pathway from expert analysis

flowchart TD
A["Pericyte injury"]
B["ADAM10 and ADAM17 activation"]
C["PDGFRbeta ectodomain shedding"]
D["Soluble PDGFRbeta release"]
E["Plasma sPDGFRbeta elevation"]
F["BBB pericyte coverage loss"]
G["Blood-brain barrier leakage"]
H["Cognitive decline"]
I["Neurodegeneration"]
J["AD and vascular dementia progression"]
K["sPDGFRbeta as peripheral biomarker"]
L["ADAM10 and ADAM17 inhibition"]
M["Pericyte protection strategies"]
A --> B --> C --> D --> E
E --> F
F --> G
G --> H
H --> I
I --> J
E --> K
L --> B
M --> A
style A fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style B fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
style C fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
style D fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
style E fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
style F fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style G fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style H fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style I fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style J fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
style K fill:#81c784,color:#0d0d1a
style L fill:#81c784,color:#0d0d1a
style M fill:#81c784,color:#0d0d1a

⚖️ Evidence

⚖️ Evidence Matrix8 supports3 contradicts
Supports
Normalization of the vasculature for treatment of cancer and other diseases.
Physiol Rev2011PMID:21742796
Supports
PDGFRβ Cells Rapidly Relay Inflammatory Signal from the Circulatory System to Neurons via Chemokine CCL2.
Neuron2018PMID:30269986
Supports
The microcirculation, the blood-brain barrier, and the neurovascular unit in health and Alzheimer disease: The aberrant pericyte is a central player.
Pharmacol Rev2025PMID:40215558
Supports
Blood-Brain Barrier: From Physiology to Disease and Back.
Physiol Rev2019PMID:30280653medium
Supports
Blood-brain barrier breakdown in Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative disorders.
Nat Rev Neurol2018PMID:29377008medium
Supports
Development, maintenance and disruption of the blood-brain barrier.
Nat Med2013PMID:24309662medium
Supports
Neurovascular pathways to neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's disease and other disorders.
Nat Rev Neurosci2011PMID:22048062medium
Supports
Blood-brain barrier biomarkers.
Adv Clin Chem2024PMID:38797540medium
Contradicts
sPDGFRβ elevated in systemic inflammation independent of brain pathology (LPS administration)
Contradicts
sPDGFRβ elevated in peripheral vascular disease without neurological conditions
Contradicts
Hepatic stellate cell PDGFRβ expression confounds circulating levels in liver disease
📖 Linked Papers

No linked papers recorded for this hypothesis yet.

🏥 Translation

🧬 3D Protein Structure — PDGFRΒ

No curated PDB or AlphaFold mapping for PDGFRΒ yet. Search RCSB →

🧠 GTEx v10 Brain ExpressionJSON

Median TPM across 13 brain regions for PDGFRβ from GTEx v10.

Cortex24.4 Caudate basal ganglia19.4 Putamen basal ganglia19.4 Anterior cingulate cortex BA2418.0 Frontal Cortex BA917.6 Nucleus accumbens basal ganglia16.9 Amygdala15.9 Substantia nigra14.8 Cerebellum13.5 Hippocampus11.8 Hypothalamus11.5 Spinal cord cervical c-110.5 Cerebellar Hemisphere7.8median TPM (GTEx v10)

💉 Clinical Trials

No clinical trials data linked to this hypothesis yet.

No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.

Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.

🔍 Search ClinVar for PDGFRβ →

No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for PDGFRβ.

Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.

🏆 Tournament

🏆 Arenas / Elo

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📊 Market Indicators

7d Trend
Falling
7d Momentum
▼ 1.1%
Volatility
Medium
0.0463
Events (7d)
3
Price History
▼17.0%

💾 Resource Usage

No resource usage or linked notebooks recorded for this hypothesis yet.

🔮 Predictions

🔎 Predictions vs Observations2 predictions · 0 with recorded observations
PredictionPredictedObservedStatusConf
If sPDGFRβ is a pericyte-loss biomarker, then declining sPDGFRβ over time will indicate improving pericyte function and better clinical outcomes in intervention studies targeting pericyte health (e.g.In pericyte-targeting trial (e.g.,Subjects receiving BMP4 or RA derivative vs placebo), plasma sPDGFRβ decreases in treatment arm (>30% reduction at 6 months) a— no observation —pending0.74
If circulating sPDGFRβ reflects pericyte loss, then sPDGFRβ levels will correlate with BBB leakage (Qalb, DCE-MRI Ktrans), decrease in brain pericyte coverage (postmortem histology), and predict cogniIn matched cohort (n≥60 with PET amyloid/tau, DCE-MRI, plasma sPDGFRβ), high plasma sPDGFRβ (top quartile) associates with elevated Qalb (OR>3), reduced pericyt— no observation —pending0.79
🔮 Falsifiable Predictions (2)
pendingconf —
If circulating sPDGFRβ reflects pericyte loss, then sPDGFRβ levels will correlate with BBB leakage (Qalb, DCE-MRI Ktrans), decrease in brain pericyte coverage (postmortem histology), and predict cognitive decline, independent of amyloid and tau burden.
Predicted outcome: In matched cohort (n≥60 with PET amyloid/tau, DCE-MRI, plasma sPDGFRβ), high plasma sPDGFRβ (top quartile) associates with elevated Qalb (OR>3), reduc
Falsification: sPDGFRβ does not correlate with BBB leakage, pericyte coverage, or cognitive trajectory after adjustment for amyloid/tau burden; levels are entirely explained by neurodegenerative rather than pericyte
pendingconf —
If sPDGFRβ is a pericyte-loss biomarker, then declining sPDGFRβ over time will indicate improving pericyte function and better clinical outcomes in intervention studies targeting pericyte health (e.g., BMP4, retinoic acid derivatives).
Predicted outcome: In pericyte-targeting trial (e.g.,Subjects receiving BMP4 or RA derivative vs placebo), plasma sPDGFRβ decreases in treatment arm (>30% reduction at 6
Falsification: sPDGFRβ does not change with pericyte-targeting intervention; BBB integrity and cognitive outcomes are unaffected by pericyte modulation despite sPDGFRβ changes, indicating sPDGFRβ is not a causal per
Metadatasource: v1_phase_c_backfill · origin_type: gap_debate
sourcev1_phase_c_backfill
origin_typegap_debate
_schema_version1
📊 Evidence Profile
Evidence Balance
+0%
Certainty
0%
Debates
0
Incoming
0
Outgoing
0
0 supporting 0 contradicting 0 neutral
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