Unbiased metabolomic investigation of the Alzheimer's disease brain points to a dysregulation of the mitochondrial aspartate metabolism
More about Open Access at the CrickAuthors list
Giuseppe Paglia Matteo Stocchero Stefano Cacciatore Steven Lai Peggi Angel Mohammad Tauqeer Alam Markus Keller Markus Ralser Giuseppe AstaritaAbstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of adult dementia. Yet the complete set of molecular changes accompanying this inexorable, neurodegenerative disease remains elusive. Here we adopted an unbiased lipidomics and metabolomics approach to surveying frozen frontal cortex samples from clinically characterized AD patients (n = 21) and age-matched controls (n = 19), revealing marked molecular differences between them. Then, by means of metabolomic pathway analysis, we incorporated the novel molecular information into the known biochemical pathways and compared it with the results of a metabolomics meta-analysis of previously published AD research. We found six metabolic pathways of the central metabolism as well as glycerophospholipid metabolism predominantly altered in AD brains. Using targeted metabolomics approaches and MS imaging, we confirmed a marked dysregulation of mitochondrial aspartate metabolism. The altered metabolic pathways were further integrated with clinical data, showing various degrees of correlation with parameters of dementia and AD pathology. Our study highlights specific, altered biochemical pathways in the brains of individuals with AD compared with those of control subjects, emphasizing dysregulation of mitochondrial aspartate metabolism and supporting future venues of investigation.
Journal details
Journal Journal of Proteome Research
Volume 15
Issue number 2
Pages 608-618
Available online
Publication date
Full text links
Publisher website (DOI) 10.1021/acs.jproteome.5b01020
Figshare View on figshare
Europe PubMed Central 26717242
Pubmed 26717242
Keywords
Related topics
Type of publication