EMBO Molecular Medicine (Jul 2020)

Neurofilaments in spinocerebellar ataxia type 3: blood biomarkers at the preataxic and ataxic stage in humans and mice

  • Carlo Wilke,
  • Eva Haas,
  • Kathrin Reetz,
  • Jennifer Faber,
  • Hector Garcia‐Moreno,
  • Magda M Santana,
  • Bart van deWarrenburg,
  • Holger Hengel,
  • Manuela Lima,
  • Alessandro Filla,
  • Alexandra Durr,
  • Bela Melegh,
  • Marcella Masciullo,
  • Jon Infante,
  • Paola Giunti,
  • Manuela Neumann,
  • Jeroen deVries,
  • Luis Pereira de Almeida,
  • Maria Rakowicz,
  • Heike Jacobi,
  • Rebecca Schüle,
  • Stephan A Kaeser,
  • Jens Kuhle,
  • Thomas Klockgether,
  • Ludger Schöls,
  • SCA3 neurofilament study group,
  • Christian Barro,
  • Jeannette Hübener‐Schmid,
  • Matthis Synofzik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201911803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract With molecular treatments coming into reach for spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3), easily accessible, cross‐species validated biomarkers for human and preclinical trials are warranted, particularly for the preataxic disease stage. We assessed serum levels of neurofilament light (NfL) and phosphorylated neurofilament heavy (pNfH) in ataxic and preataxic subjects of two independent multicentric SCA3 cohorts and in a SCA3 knock‐in mouse model. Ataxic SCA3 subjects showed increased levels of both NfL and pNfH. In preataxic subjects, NfL levels increased with proximity to the individual expected onset of ataxia, with significant NfL elevations already 7.5 years before onset. Cross‐sectional NfL levels correlated with both disease severity and longitudinal disease progression. Blood NfL and pNfH increases in human SCA3 were each paralleled by similar changes in SCA3 knock‐in mice, here also starting already at the presymptomatic stage, closely following ataxin‐3 aggregation and preceding Purkinje cell loss in the brain. Blood neurofilaments, particularly NfL, might thus provide easily accessible, cross‐species validated biomarkers in both ataxic and preataxic SCA3, associated with earliest neuropathological changes, and serve as progression, proximity‐to‐onset and, potentially, treatment‐response markers in both human and preclinical SCA3 trials.

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