Bridging the gap: Multi-omics profiling of brain tissue in Alzheimer's disease and older controls in multi-ethnic populations

弥合差距:多民族人群中阿尔茨海默病患者和老年对照组脑组织的多组学分析

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作者:Joseph S Reddy, Laura Heath, Abby Vander Linden, Mariet Allen, Katia de Paiva Lopes, Fatemeh Seifar, Erming Wang, Yiyi Ma, William L Poehlman, Zachary S Quicksall, Alexi Runnels, Yanling Wang, Duc M Duong, Luming Yin, Kaiming Xu, Erica S Modeste, Anantharaman Shantaraman, Eric B Dammer, Lingyan Ping

Discussion

The inclusion of traditionally underrepresented groups in multi-omics studies is essential to discovering the full spectrum of precision medicine targets that will be pertinent to all populations affected with AD. Highlights: Accelerating Medicines Partnership in Alzheimer's Disease Diversity Initiative led brain tissue profiling in multi-ethnic populations. Brain multi-omics data is generated from Black American, Latin American, and non-Hispanic White donors. RNA, whole genome sequencing and tandem mass tag proteomicsis completed and shared. Multiple brain regions including caudate, temporal and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex were profiled.

Methods

To bridge this gap, Accelerating Medicines Partnership in Alzheimer's Disease (AMP-AD) expanded brain multi-omics profiling to multi-ethnic donors.

Results

We generated multi-omics data and curated and harmonized phenotypic data from BA (n = 306), LA (n = 326), or BA and LA (n = 4) brain donors plus non-Hispanic White (n = 252) and other (n = 20) ethnic groups, to establish a foundational dataset enriched for BA and LA participants. This study describes the data available to the research community, including transcriptome from three brain regions, whole genome sequence, and proteome measures.

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