Frontiers in Neuroscience (Mar 2024)

Identification of novel hub genes for Alzheimer’s disease associated with the hippocampus using WGCNA and differential gene analysis

  • Yang Chen,
  • Zhaoxiang Li,
  • Xin Ge,
  • Huandi Lv,
  • Zuojun Geng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2024.1359631
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

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BackgroundAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a common, refractory, progressive neurodegenerative disorder in which cognitive and memory deficits are highly correlated with abnormalities in hippocampal brain regions. There is still a lack of hippocampus-related markers for AD diagnosis and prevention.MethodsDifferently expressed genes were identified in the gene expression profile GSE293789 in the hippocampal brain region. Enrichment analyses GO, KEGG, and GSEA were used to identify biological pathways involved in the DEGs and AD-related group. WGCNA was used to identify the gene modules that are highly associated with AD in the samples. The intersecting genes of the genes in DEGs and modules were extracted and the top ten ranked hub genes were identified. Finally GES48350 was used as a validation cohort to predict the diagnostic efficacy of hub genes.ResultsFrom GSE293789, 225 DEGs were identified, which were mainly associated with calcium response, glutamatergic synapses, and calcium-dependent phospholipid-binding response. WGCNA analysis yielded dark green and bright yellow modular genes as the most relevant to AD. From these two modules, 176 genes were extracted, which were taken to be intersected with DEGs, yielding 51 intersecting genes. Then 10 hub genes were identified in them: HSPA1B, HSPB1, HSPA1A, DNAJB1, HSPB8, ANXA2, ANXA1, SOX9, YAP1, and AHNAK. Validation of these genes was found to have excellent diagnostic performance.ConclusionTen AD-related hub genes in the hippocampus were identified, contributing to further understanding of AD development in the hippocampus and development of targets for therapeutic prevention.

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