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Large‐scale plasma proteomic profiling identifies a high‐performance biomarker panel for Alzheimer's disease screening and staging

Authors
Yuanbing Jiang,Xiaopu Zhou
Fanny C. Ip,Philip Chan,Yu Chen,Nicole C.H. Lai,Kit Cheung,Ronnie M.N. Lo,Estella P.S. Tong,Bonnie W.Y. Wong,Andrew L.T. Chan,Vincent C.T. Mok,Timothy C.Y. Kwok,Kin Y. Mok,John Hardy,Henrik Zetterberg,Amy K.Y. Fu,Nancy Y. Ip,Fanny Ip,Nicole Lai,Ronnie Lo,Estella Tong,Bonnie Wong,Andrew Chan,Vincent Mok,Timothy Kwok,Kin Mok,Amy Fu
+26 authors
,Nancy Ip
Published
May 25, 2021
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Abstract

Abstract Introduction Blood proteins are emerging as candidate biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease (AD). We systematically profiled the plasma proteome to identify novel AD blood biomarkers and develop a high‐performance, blood‐based test for AD. Methods We quantified 1160 plasma proteins in a Hong Kong Chinese cohort by high‐throughput proximity extension assay and validated the results in an independent cohort. In subgroup analyses, plasma biomarkers for amyloid, tau, phosphorylated tau, and neurodegeneration were used as endophenotypes of AD. Results We identified 429 proteins that were dysregulated in AD plasma. We selected 19 “hub proteins” representative of the AD plasma protein profile, which formed the basis of a scoring system that accurately classified clinical AD (area under the curve = 0.9690–0.9816) and associated endophenotypes. Moreover, specific hub proteins exhibit disease stage‐dependent dysregulation, which can delineate AD stages. Discussion This study comprehensively profiled the AD plasma proteome and serves as a foundation for a high‐performance, blood‐based test for clinical AD screening and staging.

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