4.6 Article

Cerebrospinal fluid profile of NPTX2 supports role of Alzheimer's disease-related inhibitory circuit dysfunction in adults with Down syndrome

Journal

MOLECULAR NEURODEGENERATION
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13024-020-00398-0

Keywords

Neuronal Pentraxin-2; Alzheimer's disease; Down syndrome; Inhibitory circuits; Cerebrospinal fluid; Biomarker; GluA4; Cortical atrophy; Glucose metabolism

Categories

Funding

  1. Fundacio Catalana Sindrome de Down
  2. Fundacio Victor Grifols i Lucas
  3. Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII), Spain [PI18/00327, PI17/01019, PI16/01825, PI17/01895, PI18/0335]
  4. National Institutes of Health, US (NIA grants) [R35NS097966, R01AG056850-01A1, R21AG056974, R01AG061566]
  5. Fundacio La Marato de TV3 [20141210, 044412]
  6. Fundacio Bancaria Obra Social La Caixa (DABNI project)
  7. Fundacion BBVA
  8. Department of Health Generalitat de Catalunya the Department of Health, Generalitat de Catalunya [SLT006/17/125, SLT002/16/00099, SLT006/17/00119, SGR 2017 00547]
  9. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER), Union Europea, Una manera de hacer Europa
  10. Miguel Servet Type II fellowship (ISCIII, FEDER) [CP18/00011]

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Background Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the major cause of death in adults with Down syndrome (DS). There is an urgent need for objective markers of AD in the DS population to improve early diagnosis and monitor disease progression. NPTX2 has recently emerged as a promising cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker of Alzheimer-related inhibitory circuit dysfunction in sporadic AD patients. The objective of this study was to evaluate NPTX2 in the CSF of adults with DS and to explore the relationship of NPTX2 to CSF levels of the PV interneuron receptor, GluA4, and existing AD biomarkers (CSF and neuroimaging). Methods This is a cross-sectional, retrospective study of adults with DS with asymptomatic AD (aDS,n = 49), prodromal AD (pDS,n = 18) and AD dementia (dDS,n = 27). Non-trisomic controls (n = 34) and patients with sporadic AD dementia (sAD,n = 40) were included for comparison. We compared group differences in CSF NPTX2 according to clinical diagnosis and degree of intellectual disability. We determined the relationship of CSF NPTX2 levels to age, cognitive performance (CAMCOG, free and cued selective reminding, semantic verbal fluency), CSF levels of a PV-interneuron marker (GluA4) and core AD biomarkers; CSF A beta(1-42), CSF t-tau, cortical atrophy (magnetic resonance imaging) and glucose metabolism ([F-18]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography). Results Compared to controls, mean CSF NPTX2 levels were lower in DS at all AD stages; aDS (0.6-fold, adj.p < 0.0001), pDS (0.5-fold, adj.p < 0.0001) and dDS (0.3-fold, adj.p < 0.0001). This reduction was similar to that observed in sporadic AD (0.5-fold, adj.p < 0.0001). CSF NPTX2 levels were not associated with age (p = 0.6), intellectual disability (p = 0.7) or cognitive performance (allp > 0.07). Low CSF NPTX2 levels were associated with low GluA4 in all clinical groups; controls (r(2) = 0.2,p = 0.003), adults with DS (r(2) = 0.4,p < 0.0001) and sporadic AD (r(2) = 0.4,p < 0.0001). In adults with DS, low CSF NPTX2 levels were associated with low CSF A beta(1-42)(r(2) > 0.3,p < 0.006), low CSF t-tau (r(2) > 0.3,p < 0.001), increased cortical atrophy (p < 0.05) and reduced glucose metabolism (p < 0.05). Conclusions Low levels of CSF NPTX2, a protein implicated in inhibitory circuit function, is common to sporadic and genetic forms of AD. CSF NPTX2 represents a promising CSF surrogate marker of early AD-related changes in adults with DS.

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