Nature Communications (Jun 2024)

Plasma proteomics identify biomarkers predicting Parkinson’s disease up to 7 years before symptom onset

  • Jenny Hällqvist,
  • Michael Bartl,
  • Mohammed Dakna,
  • Sebastian Schade,
  • Paolo Garagnani,
  • Maria-Giulia Bacalini,
  • Chiara Pirazzini,
  • Kailash Bhatia,
  • Sebastian Schreglmann,
  • Mary Xylaki,
  • Sandrina Weber,
  • Marielle Ernst,
  • Maria-Lucia Muntean,
  • Friederike Sixel-Döring,
  • Claudio Franceschi,
  • Ivan Doykov,
  • Justyna Śpiewak,
  • Héloїse Vinette,
  • Claudia Trenkwalder,
  • Wendy E. Heywood,
  • Kevin Mills,
  • Brit Mollenhauer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48961-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Parkinson’s disease is increasingly prevalent. It progresses from the pre-motor stage (characterised by non-motor symptoms like REM sleep behaviour disorder), to the disabling motor stage. We need objective biomarkers for early/pre-motor disease stages to be able to intervene and slow the underlying neurodegenerative process. Here, we validate a targeted multiplexed mass spectrometry assay for blood samples from recently diagnosed motor Parkinson’s patients (n = 99), pre-motor individuals with isolated REM sleep behaviour disorder (two cohorts: n = 18 and n = 54 longitudinally), and healthy controls (n = 36). Our machine-learning model accurately identifies all Parkinson patients and classifies 79% of the pre-motor individuals up to 7 years before motor onset by analysing the expression of eight proteins—Granulin precursor, Mannan-binding-lectin-serine-peptidase-2, Endoplasmatic-reticulum-chaperone-BiP, Prostaglaindin-H2-D-isomaerase, Interceullular-adhesion-molecule-1, Complement C3, Dickkopf-WNT-signalling pathway-inhibitor-3, and Plasma-protease-C1-inhibitor. Many of these biomarkers correlate with symptom severity. This specific blood panel indicates molecular events in early stages and could help identify at-risk participants for clinical trials aimed at slowing/preventing motor Parkinson’s disease.