Changes of tRNA-Derived Fragments by Alzheimer's Disease in Cerebrospinal Fluid and Blood Serum

阿尔茨海默病患者脑脊液和血清中 tRNA 衍生片段的变化

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作者:Wenzhe Wu, Audrey Shen, Inhan Lee, Ernesto G Miranda-Morales, Heidi Spratt, Miguel A Pappolla, Xiang Fang, Xiaoyong Bao

Background

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia, affecting individuals over 65. AD is also a multifactorial disease, with disease mechanisms incompletely characterized, and disease-modifying therapies are marginally effective. Biomarker signatures may shed light on the diagnosis, disease mechanisms, and the development of therapeutic targets. tRNA-derived RNA fragments (tRFs), a family of recently discovered small non-coding RNAs, have been found to be significantly enhanced in human AD hippocampus tissues. However, whether tRFs change in body fluids is unknown.

Conclusions

tRF5-ProAGG showed the potential as an AD biomarker and may play a role in disease progression.

Methods

We first used T4 polynucleotide kinase-RNA-seq, a modified next-generation sequencing technique, to identify detectable tRFs in human cerebrospinal fluid and serum samples. The detectable tRFs were then compared in these fluids from control, AD, and mild cognitive impairment patients using tRF qRT-PCR. The stability of tRFs in serum was also investigated by checking the change in tRFs in response to protein digestion or exosome lysis.

Objective

To investigate whether tRFs in body fluids are impacted by AD.

Results

Among various tRFs, tRF5-ProAGG seemed to be impacted by AD in both cerebrospinal fluid and serum. AD-impacted serum tRF5-ProAGG showed a correlation with the AD stage. Putative targets of tRF5-ProAGG in the hippocampus were also predicted by a computational algorithm, with some targets being validated experimentally and one of them being in a negative correlation with tRF5-ProAGG even using a small size of samples. Conclusions: tRF5-ProAGG showed the potential as an AD biomarker and may play a role in disease progression.

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