International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jun 2023)

Systemic Blood Proteome Patterns Reflect Disease Phenotypes in Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration

  • Steffen E. Künzel,
  • Leonie T. M. Flesch,
  • Dominik P. Frentzel,
  • Vitus A. Knecht,
  • Anne Rübsam,
  • Felix Dreher,
  • Moritz Schütte,
  • Alexandre Dubrac,
  • Bodo Lange,
  • Marie-Laure Yaspo,
  • Hans Lehrach,
  • Antonia M. Joussen,
  • Oliver Zeitz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241210327
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 12
p. 10327

Abstract

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There is early evidence of extraocular systemic signals effecting function and morphology in neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD). The prospective, cross-sectional BIOMAC study is an explorative investigation of peripheral blood proteome profiles and matched clinical features to uncover systemic determinacy in nAMD under anti-vascular endothelial growth factor intravitreal therapy (anti-VEGF IVT). It includes 46 nAMD patients stratified by the level of disease control under ongoing anti-VEGF treatment. Proteomic profiles in peripheral blood samples of every patient were detected with LC-MS/MS mass spectrometry. The patients underwent extensive clinical examination with a focus on macular function and morphology. In silico analysis includes unbiased dimensionality reduction and clustering, a subsequent annotation of clinical features, and non-linear models for recognition of underlying patterns. The model assessment was performed using leave-one-out cross validation. The findings provide an exploratory demonstration of the link between systemic proteomic signals and macular disease pattern using and validating non-linear classification models. Three main results were obtained: (1) Proteome-based clustering identifies two distinct patient subclusters with the smaller one (n = 10) exhibiting a strong signature for oxidative stress response. Matching the relevant meta-features on the individual patient’s level identifies pulmonary dysfunction as an underlying health condition in these patients. (2) We identify biomarkers for nAMD disease features with Aldolase C as a putative factor associated with superior disease control under ongoing anti-VEGF treatment. (3) Apart from this, isolated protein markers are only weakly correlated with nAMD disease expression. In contrast, applying a non-linear classification model identifies complex molecular patterns hidden in a high number of proteomic dimensions determining macular disease expression. In conclusion, so far unconsidered systemic signals in the peripheral blood proteome contribute to the clinically observed phenotype of nAMD, which should be examined in future translational research on AMD.

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