4.6 Article

Novel candidate blood-based transcriptional biomarkers of machado-joseph disease

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 968-975

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.26238

Keywords

spinocerebellar ataxia type 3; polyglutamine disease; gene expression; ataxin-3; microarray

Funding

  1. FEDER funds through the Operational Competitiveness Programme COMPETE
  2. National Funds through FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-028753 (PTDC/DTP/PIC/0370/2012)]
  3. Fundo Regional para a Ciencia (FRC) [M3.1.2/F/006/2011, M3.1.7/F/031/2011, M3.1.3/F/004/2009]
  4. Governo dos Acores
  5. FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BPD/33611/2009]
  6. UK Medical Research Council (MRC)
  7. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BPD/33611/2009] Funding Source: FCT

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BackgroundMachado-Joseph disease (or spinocerebellar ataxia type 3) is a late-onset polyglutamine neurodegenerative disorder caused by a mutation in the ATXN3 gene, which encodes for the ubiquitously expressed protein ataxin-3. Previous studies on cell and animal models have suggested that mutated ataxin-3 is involved in transcriptional dysregulation. Starting with a whole-transcriptome profiling of peripheral blood samples from patients and controls, we aimed to confirm abnormal expression profiles in Machado-Joseph disease and to identify promising up-regulated genes as potential candidate biomarkers of disease status. MethodsThe Illumina Human V4-HT12 array was used to measure transcriptome-wide gene expression in peripheral blood samples from 12 patients and 12 controls. Technical validation and validation in an independent set of samples were performed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). ResultsBased on the results from the microarray, twenty six genes, found to be up-regulated in patients, were selected for technical validation by quantitative real-time PCR (validation rate of 81% for the up-regulation trend). Fourteen of these were further tested in an independent set of 42 patients and 35 controls; 10 genes maintained the up-regulation trend (FCGR3B, CSR2RA, CLC, TNFSF14, SLA, P2RY13, FPR2, SELPLG, YIPF6, and GPR96); FCGR3B, P2RY13, and SELPLG were significantly up-regulated in patients when compared with controls. ConclusionsOur findings support the hypothesis that mutated ataxin-3 is associated with transcription dysregulation, detectable in peripheral blood cells. Furthermore, this is the first report suggesting a pool of up-regulated genes in Machado-Joseph disease that may have the potential to be used for fine phenotyping of this disease. (c) 2015 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

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