Proteomic investigation of ALS motor cortex identifies known and novel pathogenetic mechanisms.

J Neurol Sci

Centre for Clinical Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4029, Australia; Wesley Medical Research, The Wesley Hospital, Auchenflower, QLD 4066, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The primary issue in ALS is the death of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord, but the exact reasons for this degeneration are still unclear.
  • Researchers used SWATH-MS to analyze proteins in the motor cortex of 8 ALS patients compared to 8 healthy controls, identifying 1427 proteins, with 187 showing significant differences in expression.
  • Bioinformatics revealed that the altered proteins were linked to various biological processes, with mitochondrial dysfunction identified as a critical pathway that may contribute to motor neuron death in ALS.

Article Abstract

The key pathological feature in ALS is death of motor neurones from the brain and spinal cord, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this degeneration remain unknown. Quantifying the motor cortex proteome in autopsy brain and comparing tissues from ALS cases and non-ALS controls is critical to understanding these mechanisms. We used Sequential Window Acquisition of All Theoretical Mass Spectra (SWATH-MS) to characterize the proteomes of the motor cortex from ALS cases (n = 8) and control subjects (n = 8). A total of 1427 proteins were identified at a critical local false discovery rate < 5%; 187 of these exhibited significant expression differences between ALS cases and controls. Of these, 91 proteins were significantly upregulated and 96 proteins were significantly downregulated. Bioinformatics analysis revealed that these proteins are involved in molecular transport, protein trafficking, free radical scavenging, lipid metabolism, cell death and survival, nucleic acid metabolism, inflammatory response or amino acid metabolism and carbohydrate metabolism. Differentially expressed proteins were subjected to pathway analysis. This revealed abnormalities in pathways involving mitochondrial function, sirtuin signaling, oxidative phosphorylation, glycolysis, phagosome maturation, SNARE signaling, redox regulation and several others. Core analysis revealed mitochondrial dysfunction to be the top canonical pathway. The top-enriched networks involved JNK activation and inhibition of AKT signaling, suggesting that disruption of these signaling pathways could lead to demise of motor neurons in the ALS motor cortex.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2023.120753DOI Listing

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