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Bioinformatic and Microarray Strategies to Identify Peripheral Biomarkers for Parkinson’s Disease. Bruce Chase University of Nebraska - Omaha. Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD. Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome How might peripheral biomarkers be useful?
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Bioinformatic and Microarray Strategies to Identify Peripheral Biomarkers for Parkinson’s Disease Bruce Chase University of Nebraska - Omaha
Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome • How might peripheral biomarkers be useful? • Is there evidence for peripheral biomarkers? • Bioinformatic/Microarray approaches • Proof of concept
Parkinson’s Disease Is A Complex Syndrome • Cardinal Features • Resting tremor • Rigidity • Bradykinesia • Postural instability • Positive and long-lasting response to levodopa • Parkinson’s Plus Syndromes • poor or short-lived response to levodopa • autonomic dysfunction • dementia • ophthalmoplegia • amyotrophy • dystonia • depression • ataxia
Neuronal Complexity in PD • Neurodegeneration • Progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra • Formation of Lewy bodies • Impacts multiple neurochemical pathways • dopamine • norepinephrine • serotonin • acetylcholine • GABA • glutamate
Behavioral Abnormalities DLB Memory Disorder Extrapyramidal Disorder PD PD With Dementia LB Variant Of AD AD Visual Hallucinations Clinical Spectrum of Lewy Body Disorders Modified from Arch Neurol 2001; 58:186
Genetic Complexity In Parkinson’s Disease • Common Idiopathic Forms • Unknown cause • Environmental (+ Genetic?) • Less Common Monogenic Forms • -synuclein (PARK1) • Parkin (PARK2) • UCH-L1 (PARK5) • Tau • >4 others
Molecular Complexity: -Synuclein • Main component of intracellular fibrillar protein deposits in affected brain regions in multiple neurodegenerative disorders • Parkinson’s disease (Lewy bodies) • Alzheimer disease (plaques) • Multiple system atrophy • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis • Mutations in the coding region and gene triplications only cause familial Parkinson’s disease
Molecular Complexity: -Synuclein • -Synuclein interactions • b-amyloid • tau • parkin • phospholipase D2 • transcription factor Elk-1 • dopamine transporter • tyrosine hydroxylase • lipids • Biophysical properties • Can exist in multiple conformations • Affected by environment and mutations • Can form protofibrils and fibrils • Affected by lipid binding
Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome • How might peripheral biomarkers be useful? • Is there evidence for peripheral biomarkers? • Bioinformatic/Microarray approaches • Proof of concept
How Might Peripheral Biomarkers Be Useful? • Clinical Issues in PD • Etiology of PD is largely unknown • Biomarkers could aid in understanding PD etiology • PD is a chronic, progressive and complex syndrome where diagnosis is subjective, confirmable only at autospy, and disease progression is variable • Biomarkers could discriminate between forms of PD, support early diagnosis, document stage • Peripheral biomarkers are evaluated using relatively noninvasive methods • Therapy is based solely on symptoms, and requires periodic adjustment • Biomarkers could aid in design/implementation of optimal therapeutic regimens
Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome • How might peripheral biomarkers be useful? • Is there evidence for peripheral biomarkers? • Bioinformatic/Microarray approaches • Proof of Concept
Test Case: Do -Synuclein Expression Levels Serve as a Biomarker? • -Synuclein expression in lymphocytes • Low levels: RT-PCR • Lanes 1-4: lymphocyte RNA • Lanes 5-7: Lymphoblastoid cell lines • Lanes 8-9: Negative controls • Do levels vary with disease status? • Assess levels of mutant and normal gene products as a function of disease status
G88C exon 3 G209A exon 4 Assess -Synuclein Expression Levels In Kindreds Transmitting -Synuclein Mutations • Autosomal dominant mutations • Variable expressivity • Age of onset • Disease severity/duration • Presence of dementia • Pathological findings • Within & between kindreds G209A exon 4
G209A G88C Direct sequencing of RT-PCR products qRT-PCR G209A G88C RFLP RT-PCR Mutant Alleles Show Reduced Expression In Late-Stage Familial Parkinson’s Disease
Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome • How might peripheral biomarkers be useful? • Is there evidence for peripheral biomarkers? • Bioinformatic/Microarray approaches • Proof of concept
Bioinformatic/Microarray Approaches • Evaluate gene expression profiles to identify a molecular signature associated with PD stages/forms • Targets identified using bioinformatic approach: all genes in pathways previously suggested relevant to PD • Alternative: Assess all genes without an initial bias • Concerns: • Power: What constitutes a biological replicate in RNA samples? • What are normal levels of variation? • Are parkinsonian individuals more variable? • Affected individuals fluctuate in disease severity • Disease symptoms vary widely in idiopathic disease • Genetic/environmental background effects (noise) could be as large as disease effects (signal) • Statistical evaluation • Relevance to neuronal function
G209A exon 4 G88C exon 3 Kindred Members As “Biological” Replicates • Pseudosolution: • Reduce genetic (and possibly environmental) variation • Compare profiles obtained from nuclear families transmitting a dominant mutation • Use UPDRS (Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale) to score disease severity • Compare first-degree relatives who are • Symptomatic gene-positive vs. gene-negative • Symptomatic vs. asymptomatic gene-positive
Identifying Peripheral Biomarkers for PD • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) as a complex syndrome • How might peripheral biomarkers be useful? • Is there evidence for peripheral biomarkers? • Bioinformatic/Microarray approaches • Proof of concept
Trial Design • Extract RNA from G209A/ + heterozygotes • Label RNA from a severely symptomatic individual with Cy5 • Label RNA from mildly symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals with Cy3 • Probe cDNA spotted arrays; Affymetrix chips
Multiple Processes Appear Affected • Energy/metabolism • ATP synthase, ATPase • cytochrome C oxidase • NADH dehydrogenase • Neurotransmission • GABA-A receptor subunits, associated proteins • DOPA decarboxylase • Catechol-O-methyltransferase • Chloride channel • Neurodegeneration / protein degradation / apoptosis • alpha-Synuclein interacting protein (synphilin) • Huntingtin interacting protein C • Tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, members • E3 ubiquitin ligase • Apoptosis-inducing serine-threonine kinase • Transcriptional regulation / Development • Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H1 • Bicaudal • Translation • Eukaryotic translation initiation and elongation factors
Summary • Parkinson’s Disease is a complex syndrome • Biomarkers hold promise for aiding diagnosis and implementing treatment regimens • Peripheral biomarkers are likely to exist • Microarray-based approaches hold promise for peripheral biomarker development • Comparisons between nuclear family members in FPD kindreds may serve to increase power and reduce environmental and genetic effects in the initial identification of peripheral biomarkers
Acknowledgments • Collaborators • Katerina Markopoulou, UNMC, Omaha • Zbigniew Wszolek, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville • Lola Katechalidou, ELPIS Hospital, Athens • Nobu Hattori, Juntendo Medical School, Tokyo • Microarray consultants • Jim Eudy, UNMC, Omaha • Dan Bosinov, UNMC, Omaha • Funding • NIH/NINDS • NE-BRIN