Clinical and Translational Neuroscience Unit, Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience, National Institute on Aging (NIA), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Baltimore, MD, USA.
Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2018;61(1):401-414. doi: 10.3233/JAD-170557.
We recently reported that alpha-2 macroglobulin (A2M) is a biomarker of neuronal injury in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and identified a network of nine genes co-expressed with A2M in the brain. This network includes the gene encoding SPARCL1, a protein implicated in synaptic maintenance. Here, we examine whether SPARCL1 is associated with longitudinal changes in brain structure and function in older individuals at risk for AD in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. Using data from the Gene-Tissue Expression Project, we first identified two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), rs9998212 and rs7695558, associated with lower brain SPARCL1 gene expression. We then analyzed longitudinal trajectories of cognitive performance in 591 participants who remained cognitively normal (average follow-up interval: 11.8 years) and 129 subjects who eventually developed MCI or AD (average follow-up interval: 9.4 years). Cognitively normal minor allele carriers of rs7695558 who developed incident AD showed accelerated memory loss prior to disease onset. Next, we compared longitudinal changes in brain volumes (MRI; n = 120 participants; follow-up = 6.4 years; 826 scans) and resting-state cerebral blood flow (rCBF; 15O-water PET; n = 81 participants; follow-up = 7.7 years; 664 scans) in cognitively normal participants. Cognitively normal minor allele carriers of rs9998212 showed accelerated atrophy in several global, lobar, and regional brain volumes. Minor allele carriers of both SNPs showed longitudinal changes in rCBF in several brain regions, including those vulnerable to AD pathology. Our findings suggest that SPARCL1 accelerates AD pathogenesis and thus link neuroinflammation with widespread changes in brain structure and function during aging.
我们最近报道称,α-2 巨球蛋白(A2M)是阿尔茨海默病(AD)中神经元损伤的生物标志物,并鉴定了大脑中与 A2M 共表达的九个基因的网络。该网络包括编码 SPARCL1 的基因,SPARCL1 蛋白与突触维持有关。在这里,我们检查了 SPARCL1 是否与在 AD 风险较高的老年个体中大脑结构和功能的纵向变化相关。使用来自基因组织表达项目的数据,我们首先鉴定了两个与大脑 SPARCL1 基因表达降低相关的单核苷酸多态性(SNP),rs9998212 和 rs7695558。然后,我们分析了 591 名认知正常(平均随访间隔:11.8 年)和 129 名最终发展为 MCI 或 AD(平均随访间隔:9.4 年)的参与者的认知表现的纵向轨迹。认知正常的 rs7695558 小等位基因携带者在疾病发作前表现出记忆丧失的加速。接下来,我们比较了认知正常参与者的大脑容积(MRI;n=120 名参与者;随访=6.4 年;826 次扫描)和静息状态脑血流(rCBF;15O-水 PET;n=81 名参与者;随访=7.7 年;664 次扫描)的纵向变化。认知正常的 rs9998212 小等位基因携带者在几个全局、叶和区域脑容积中表现出加速萎缩。这两个 SNP 的小等位基因携带者都表现出 rCBF 在几个脑区的纵向变化,包括那些易受 AD 病理学影响的脑区。我们的研究结果表明,SPARCL1 加速了 AD 的发病机制,从而将神经炎症与衰老过程中大脑结构和功能的广泛变化联系起来。