detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

doi:10.1007/s00401-024-02752-8...

Autor
Mielke, Justin K. Klingeborn, Mikael Schultz, Eric P. Markham, Erin L. Reese, Emily D. Alam, Parvez Mackenzie, Ian R. Ly, Cindy V. Caughey, Byron Cashman, Neil R. Leavens, Moses J.
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Categoría

Medicine & Public Health

Año

2024

fecha de cotización

19/6/2024

Palabras clave
superoxide dismutase 1 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis protein aggregation sporadic als familial als real-time quaking-induced conversi... rt-quic aggregates neural form detected specimens motor human cortex cord sod1 spinal als seeding activity sporadic
Métrico

Resumen

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease with average lifespan of 2–5 years after diagnosis.

The identification of novel prognostic and pharmacodynamic biomarkers are needed to facilitate therapeutic development.

Metalloprotein human superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) is known to accumulate and form aggregates in patient neural tissue with familial ALS linked to mutations in their SOD1 gene.

Aggregates of SOD1 have also been detected in other forms of ALS, including the sporadic form and the most common familial form linked to abnormal hexanucleotide repeat expansions in the Chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 ( C9ORF72 ) gene.

Here, we report the development of a real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) seed amplification assay using a recombinant human SOD1 substrate to measure SOD1 seeding activity in postmortem spinal cord and motor cortex tissue from persons with different ALS etiologies.

Our SOD1 RT-QuIC assay detected SOD1 seeds in motor cortex and spinal cord dilutions down to 10^–5.

Importantly, we detected SOD1 seeding activity in specimens from both sporadic and familial ALS cases, with the latter having mutations in either their SOD1 or C9ORF72 genes.

Analyses of RT-QuIC parameters indicated similar lag phases in spinal cords of sporadic and familial ALS patients, but higher ThT fluorescence maxima by SOD1 familial ALS specimens and sporadic ALS thoracic cord specimens.

For a subset of sporadic ALS patients, motor cortex and spinal cords were examined, with seeding activity in both anatomical regions.

Our results suggest SOD1 seeds are in ALS patient neural tissues not linked to SOD1 mutation, suggesting that SOD1 seeding activity may be a promising biomarker, particularly in sporadic ALS cases for whom genetic testing is uninformative.

Mielke, Justin K.,Klingeborn, Mikael,Schultz, Eric P.,Markham, Erin L.,Reese, Emily D.,Alam, Parvez,Mackenzie, Ian R.,Ly, Cindy V.,Caughey, Byron,Cashman, Neil R.,Leavens, Moses J., 2024, Seeding activity of human superoxide dismutase 1 aggregates in familial and sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis postmortem neural tissues by real-time quaking-induced conversion, Springer

Documento

Abrir

Compartir

Fuente

Artículos recomendados por ES/IODE IA

High-Frequency Repetitive Magnetic Stimulation at the Sacrum Alleviates Chronic Constipation in Parkinson’s Patients
magnetic stimulation parkinson’s significant patients scale sacrum pd hf-rms chronic constipation scores
The mechanism of PFK-1 in the occurrence and development of bladder cancer by regulating ZEB1 lactylation
bladder cancer pfk-1 zeb1 lactylation glycolysis inhibits lactate glucose bc pfk-1 cancer lactylation cells bladder