Study Traces Shared and Unique Cellular Hallmarks Found in 6 Neurodegenerative Diseases

Summary: Multiple neurodegenerative disorders harbor similar fundamental dysfunctional cellular processes.

Source: University of Arizona

A perplexing range of neurodegenerative diseases are known to attack distinct regions of the brain, causing severe cognitive and motor deficit. The combined impact of these (generally fatal) diseases has inflicted a devastating toll on society.

New insights suggest many of these afflictions have their origin in a constellation of common processes, which play out in different ways as each disease develops.

In a study appearing in the current issue of Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’ Association, corresponding author Carol Huseby of Arizona State University and her colleagues look at cellular alterations in six distinct neurodegenerative diseases: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrig’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, Friedreich’s ataxia, frontotemporal dementia, Huntington’s disease and Parkinson’s disease.Carol Huseby is a researcher with the ASU-Banner Neurodegenerative Disease Research Center.

The study uses an innovative approach, which includes the machine learning analysis of RNA found in whole blood. By comparing multiple diseases, researchers can identify which RNA markers occur across several neurodegenerative diseases and which are unique to each disease.

“It appears that multiple neurodegenerative diseases harbor similar fundamental dysfunctional cellular processes,” says Huseby, a researcher with the ASU-Banner Neurodegenerative Disease Research Center.

“Differences between diseases may be key to discovering regional cell-type vulnerabilities and therapeutic targets for each disease.”

The blood samples used for the study were derived from a publicly available data set known as the Gene Expression Omnibus. Each of the six neurodegenerative diseases were probed. As the machine learning algorithm combed through thousands of genes, it assembled sets of RNA transcripts that optimally classified each disease, comparing the data with RNA samples from healthy patient blood.

The selected RNA transcripts reveal eight common themes across the six neurodegenerative diseases: transcription regulation, degranulation (a process involved in inflammation), immune response, protein synthesis, cell death or apoptosis, cytoskeletal components, ubiquitylation/proteasome (involved in protein degradation) and mitochondrial complexes (which oversee energy usage in cells). The eight cellular dysfunctions uncovered are associated with identifiable pathologies in the brain characteristic of each disease.

The study also identified uncommon transcripts for each disease, which may represent unexplored disease pathways. Such disease-specific outliers may be explored as a potential source of diagnostic biomarkers.

For example, while synaptic loss was a common feature in all six of the diseases analyzed, transcripts related to a phenomenon known as spliceosome regulation were only detected in the case of Alzheimer’s disease. (The spliceosome is a protein complex found in the cell nucleus, essential for proper cell function. Defective splicing of RNA is associated with disease.)

The investigation of blood biomarkers for neurodegenerative diseases, coupled with powerful statistical methods using artificial intelligence, has opened a new window on these serious afflictions. Blood can be easily sampled in living patients at all stages of health and disease, providing a powerful new tool for early diagnosis.

According to the United Nations, when all neurodegenerative diseases are considered, the global death toll may top a staggering 1 billion people. The course of many such diseases is protracted and pitiless, causing not only grave suffering to patients but a massive economic burden on health care systems.

New methods of early diagnosis, improved treatments and possible methods of prevention are vitally needed.

Most neurodegenerative diseases, however, have been tricky to accurately diagnose and stubbornly resistant to treatment, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the leading cause of dementia.

While genetic factors do play a role in the development of AD, most cases are regarded as sporadic, meaning the underlying causes are unclear.

This shows a diagram of the brain
The illustration shows the cell types and brain regions affected by six different neurodegenerative diseases: Friedreich’s ataxia (purple); Huntington’s disease (blue); frontotemporal dementia (yellow); amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as motor neuron disease (MND) or Lou Gehrig’s disease (green); Parkinson’s disease (orange); and Alzheimer’s disease (pink). Credit: Shireen Dooling

This is also the case with three other diseases highlighted in the study: frontotemporal dementia, ALS and Parkinson’s disease. Huntington’s disease and Friedreich’s ataxia appear to be genetically determined and are said to be familial.

Signposts of neurodegeneration are detectable in both the central nervous and peripheral vascular systems. The diseases may also migrate from their point of origin to distant brain regions, where they inflict most of their damage.

The study describes RNA clusters or trees selected by the machine learning process, which uncovers patterns of gene expression common to the six neurodegenerative diseases explored in the study as well as expression profiles that are distinct and disease dependent.

Thousands of such trees are created and statistically compared by the machine learning algorithm, to pick out groupings of 20 transcripts that most closely align with known disease pathways in the diseases under study.

The findings offer clues about common cellular features that may play a role in jump-starting processes of neurodegeneration. The study also raises puzzling questions about how distinct disease forms ultimately develop from these common elements.

From the RNA transcripts extracted from blood, some 10,000 genes are expressed. The machine learning algorithm, known as Random Forest, categorizes the data and compares results with gene expression profiles known to be associated with disease-linked biological pathways.

Screening of whole blood and examination of the complete RNA profile can overcome the limitations of many other forms of testing, which are often less comprehensive as well as expensive, highly invasive and labor intensive.

Diagnosis through whole blood, in contrast, can be carried out at low cost virtually anywhere in the world. Blood results can be tracked over time, providing a valuable window on disease progression. Research of this kind may also encourage new modes of treatment.

The results suggest a tantalizing possibility: Transcriptional changes shared by multiple disease types may provide the initial seeds that later develop into each of the distinct brain afflictions. The mechanisms responsible for these common factors germinating to produce diverse diseases and symptomologies, attacking different regions of the brain, remain a central puzzle to be solved.

Future research will explore transcriptional impacts on neurons in addition to blood cells as well as the underlying mechanisms that set the stage for neurodegenerative diseases to develop and evolve their distinct pathologies.

About this neurology and genetics research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Arizona
Contact: Press Office – University of Arizona
Image: The image is credited to Shireen Dooling

Original Research: Closed access.
Blood RNA transcripts reveal similar and differential alterations in fundamental cellular processes in Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases” by Carol J. Huseby et al. Alzheimer’s & Dementia


Abstract

Blood RNA transcripts reveal similar and differential alterations in fundamental cellular processes in Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases

Background

Dysfunctional processes in Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases lead to neural degeneration in the central and peripheral nervous system. Research demonstrates that neurodegeneration of any kind is a systemic disease that may even begin outside of the region vulnerable to the disease. Neurodegenerative diseases are defined by the vulnerabilities and pathology occurring in the regions affected.

Method

A random forest machine learning analysis on whole blood transcriptomes from six neurodegenerative diseases generated unbiased disease-classifying RNA transcripts subsequently subjected to pathway analysis.

Results

We report that transcripts of the blood transcriptome selected for each of the neurodegenerative diseases represent fundamental biological cell processes including transcription regulation, degranulation, immune response, protein synthesis, apoptosis, cytoskeletal components, ubiquitylation/proteasome, and mitochondrial complexes that are also affected in the brain and reveal common themes across six neurodegenerative diseases.

Conclusion

Neurodegenerative diseases share common dysfunctions in fundamental cellular processes. Identifying regional vulnerabilities will reveal unique disease mechanisms.

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  1. I have been diagnosed with functional neurological disorder by my neurologist. Any suggestions in the Northeast area of Ohio as in psychotherapist and or physical therapist

  2. The neurodegenerative results of CTE from repeated electrical mechanism of trauma as so claimed by an expert in such matters, Dr. Bennett Omalu need to be addressed by researchers as well. I realize that many research centers are tied to facilities that use the practice of ECT/ Electroshock, but these damages being found and even anticipated based on said mechanism are not simply going to go away because physicians don’t want to face these facts.These damages are now fortunately being tied to ECT in medical records, and given the impacted population that grows daily we likewise deserve help through research.

  3. Something is capable of burning DNA in the nerves?
    How did it get there without damaging other tissue?
    Blood vessels damaged at the capillaries conection?
    I’ll be looking at patients history

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