International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2020)

Saliva microRNA Biomarkers of Cumulative Concussion

  • Steven D. Hicks,
  • Robert P. Olympia,
  • Cayce Onks,
  • Raymond Y. Kim,
  • Kevin J. Zhen,
  • Gregory Fedorchak,
  • Samantha DeVita,
  • Aakanksha Rangnekar,
  • Matthew Heller,
  • Hallie Zwibel,
  • Chuck Monteith,
  • Zofia Gagnon,
  • Callan D. McLoughlin,
  • Jason Randall,
  • Miguel Madeira,
  • Thomas R. Campbell,
  • Elise Fengler,
  • Michael N. Dretsch,
  • Christopher Neville,
  • Frank A. Middleton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21207758
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 20
p. 7758

Abstract

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Recurrent concussions increase risk for persistent post-concussion symptoms, and may lead to chronic neurocognitive deficits. Little is known about the molecular pathways that contribute to persistent concussion symptoms. We hypothesized that salivary measurement of microribonucleic acids (miRNAs), a class of epitranscriptional molecules implicated in concussion pathophysiology, would provide insights about the molecular cascade resulting from recurrent concussions. This hypothesis was tested in a case-control study involving 13 former professional football athletes with a history of recurrent concussion, and 18 age/sex-matched peers. Molecules of interest were further validated in a cross-sectional study of 310 younger individuals with a history of no concussion (n = 230), a single concussion (n = 56), or recurrent concussions (n = 24). There was no difference in neurocognitive performance between the former professional athletes and their peers, or among younger individuals with varying concussion exposures. However, younger individuals without prior concussion outperformed peers with prior concussion on three balance assessments. Twenty salivary miRNAs differed (adj. p p < 0.05) with the number of prior concussions reported by younger individuals. miR-28-3p and miR-339-5p may play a role in the pathophysiologic mechanism involved in cumulative concussion effects.

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