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Fingerprinting Alzheimer’s Disease by <sup>1</sup>H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy of Cerebrospinal Fluid

Alessia Vignoli, Silvia Paciotti, Leonardo Tenori, Paolo Eusebi, Leonardo Biscetti, Davide Chiasserini, Philip Scheltens, Paola Turano, Charlotte E. Teunissen, Claudio Luchinat, Lucilla Parnetti

2020Journal of Proteome Research47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this study, we sought for a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) metabolomic fingerprint in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients characterized, according to the clinical picture and CSF AD core biomarkers (Aβ42, p-tau, and t-tau), both at pre-dementia (mild cognitive impairment due to AD, MCI-AD) and dementia stages (ADdem) and in a group of patients with a normal CSF biomarker profile (non-AD) using untargeted 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy-based metabolomics. This is a retrospective study based on two independent cohorts: a Dutch cohort, which comprises 20 ADdem, 20 MCI-AD, and 20 non-AD patients, and an Italian cohort, constituted by 14 ADdem and 12 non-AD patients. 1H NMR CSF spectra were analyzed using OPLS-DA. Metabolomic fingerprinting in the Dutch cohort provides a significant discrimination (86.1% accuracy) between ADdem and non-AD. MCI-AD patients show a good discrimination with respect to ADdem (70.0% accuracy) but only slight differences when compared with non-AD (59.6% accuracy). Acetate, valine, and 3-hydroxyisovalerate result to be altered in ADdem patients. Valine correlates with cognitive decline at follow-up (R = 0.53, P = 0.0011). The discrimination between ADdem and non-AD was confirmed in the Italian cohort. The CSF metabolomic fingerprinting shows a signature characteristic of ADdem patients with respect to MCI-AD and non-AD patients.

Topics & Concepts

Cerebrospinal fluidDementiaCohortBiomarkerInternal medicineMagnetic resonance imagingMetabolomicsMedicineRetrospective cohort studyDiseaseCohort studyCognitive declinePathologyPsychologyGastroenterologyChemistryBioinformaticsBiochemistryBiologyRadiologyMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry StudiesAlzheimer's disease research and treatmentsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research