Extracellular Matrix Changes in Subcellular Brain Fractions and Cerebrospinal Fluid of Alzheimer's Disease Patients.
Lukas HöhnWilhelm HußlerAnni RichterKarl-Heinz SmallaAnna Maria Birkl-ToeglhoferChristoph BirklStefan VielhaberStefan L LeberEckart D GundelfingerJohannes HaybaeckStefanie SchreiberConstanze I SeidenbecherPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The brain's extracellular matrix (ECM) is assumed to undergo rearrangements in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we investigated changes of key components of the hyaluronan-based ECM in independent samples of post-mortem brains (N = 19), cerebrospinal fluids (CSF; N = 70), and RNAseq data (N = 107; from The Aging, Dementia and TBI Study) of AD patients and non-demented controls. Group comparisons and correlation analyses of major ECM components in soluble and synaptosomal fractions from frontal, temporal cortex, and hippocampus of control, low-grade, and high-grade AD brains revealed a reduction in brevican in temporal cortex soluble and frontal cortex synaptosomal fractions in AD. In contrast, neurocan, aggrecan and the link protein HAPLN1 were up-regulated in soluble cortical fractions. In comparison, RNAseq data showed no correlation between aggrecan and brevican expression levels and Braak or CERAD stages, but for hippocampal expression of HAPLN1, neurocan and the brevican-interaction partner tenascin-R negative correlations with Braak stages were detected. CSF levels of brevican and neurocan in patients positively correlated with age, total tau, p-Tau, neurofilament-L and Aβ1-40. Negative correlations were detected with the Aβ ratio and the IgG index. Altogether, our study reveals spatially segregated molecular rearrangements of the ECM in AD brains at RNA or protein levels, which may contribute to the pathogenic process.
Keyphrases
- extracellular matrix
- cerebrospinal fluid
- end stage renal disease
- low grade
- high grade
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- magnetic resonance
- traumatic brain injury
- poor prognosis
- cognitive impairment
- computed tomography
- patient reported outcomes
- machine learning
- cerebral ischemia
- human immunodeficiency virus
- amino acid
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence
- blood brain barrier
- subarachnoid hemorrhage