4.7 Article

Association of early-onset Alzheimer's disease with germline-generated high affinity self-antigen load

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TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-0826-6

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  1. National Center for High-performance Computing of National Applied Research Laboratories in Taiwan [MOST1082319-B-492-001]
  2. Kaohsiung Medical University
  3. Kaohsiung Medical University Research Center Grant [KMU-TC108B01]
  4. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [108-2320B-037-006]
  5. Kaohsiung Municipal Siaogang Hospital [Kmhk-104-041]

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Self-antigen presentation outside the central nervous system has crucial role regarding self-proteins tolerance and autoimmunity, leading to neuroinflammation. Self-antigen with strong-binding affinity is considered to be pathogenic. We aim to investigate whether strong-binding affinity self-antigen load is associated with early/late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD). A total of 54 AD samples (22 early-onset, 32 late-onset) underwent next-generation sequencing (NGS) for whole-exome sequencing. Genotypes of HLA class I genes and germline mutations were obtained for estimation of the binding affinity and number of self-antigens. For each patient, self-antigen load was estimated by adding up the number of self-antigens with strong-binding affinity. Self-antigen load of early-onset AD was significantly higher than late-onset AD (mean +/- SD: 6115 +/- 2430 vs 4373 +/- 2492; p=0.011). An appropriate cutoff value 2503 for dichotomizing self-antigen load was obtained by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Patients were then dichotomized into high or low self-antigen load groups in the binary multivariate logistic regression analysis. Adjusted odds ratio of the high self-antigen load (>2503) was 14.22 (95% CI, 1.22-165.70; p=0.034) after controlling other covariates including gender, education, ApoE status, and baseline CDR score. This is the first study using NGS to investigate germline mutations generated self-antigen load in AD. As strong-binding affinity self-antigen is considered to be pathogenic in neuroinflammation, our finding indicated that self-antigen load did have a role in the pathogenesis of AD owing to its association with neuroinflammation. This finding may also contribute to further research regarding disease mechanism and development of novel biomarkers or treatment.

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