Similar brain proteomic signatures in Alzheimer’s disease and epilepsy

被引:0
作者
Dominique Leitner
Geoffrey Pires
Tomas Kavanagh
Evgeny Kanshin
Manor Askenazi
Beatrix Ueberheide
Orrin Devinsky
Thomas Wisniewski
Eleanor Drummond
机构
[1] Grossman School of Medicine,Center for Cognitive Neurology, Department of Neurology
[2] New York University,Brain and Mind Centre and School of Medical Sciences
[3] University of Sydney,Proteomics Laboratory, Division of Advanced Research Technologies and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology
[4] New York University Grossman School of Medicine,Comprehensive Epilepsy Center
[5] Biomedical Hosting LLC,undefined
[6] New York University Grossman School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Acta Neuropathologica | 2024年 / 147卷
关键词
Alzheimer’s disease; Epilepsy; Proteomics; Tau; Mass spectrometry; Beta amyloid;
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摘要
The prevalence of epilepsy is increased among Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) patients and cognitive impairment is common among people with epilepsy. Epilepsy and AD are linked but the shared pathophysiological changes remain poorly defined. We aim to identify protein differences associated with epilepsy and AD using published proteomics datasets. We observed a highly significant overlap in protein differences in epilepsy and AD: 89% (689/777) of proteins altered in the hippocampus of epilepsy patients were significantly altered in advanced AD. Of the proteins altered in both epilepsy and AD, 340 were altered in the same direction, while 216 proteins were altered in the opposite direction. Synapse and mitochondrial proteins were markedly decreased in epilepsy and AD, suggesting common disease mechanisms. In contrast, ribosome proteins were increased in epilepsy but decreased in AD. Notably, many of the proteins altered in epilepsy interact with tau or are regulated by tau expression. This suggests that tau likely mediates common protein changes in epilepsy and AD. Immunohistochemistry for Aβ and multiple phosphorylated tau species (pTau396/404, pTau217, pTau231) showed a trend for increased intraneuronal pTau217 and pTau231 but no phosphorylated tau aggregates or amyloid plaques in epilepsy hippocampal sections. Our results provide insights into common mechanisms in epilepsy and AD and highlights the potential role of tau in mediating common pathological protein changes in epilepsy and AD.
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