Neurobiology of Disease (Aug 2002)

Nogo Provides a Molecular Marker for Diagnosis of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

  • Luc Dupuis,
  • Jose-Luis Gonzalez de Aguilar,
  • Franck di Scala,
  • Frédérique Rene,
  • Marc de Tapia,
  • Pierre-François Pradat,
  • Lucette Lacomblez,
  • Danielle Seihlan,
  • Rabinder Prinjha,
  • Frank S. Walsh,
  • Vincent Meininger,
  • Jean-Philippe Loeffler

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
pp. 358 – 365

Abstract

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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurological disorder characterized by the selective degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons. The lack of a molecular diagnostic marker is of increasing concern in view of the therapeutic strategies in development. Using an unbiased subtractive suppressive hybridization screen we have identified a clone encoding the neurite outgrowth inhibitor Nogo and shown that its isoforms display a characteristic altered expression in ALS. This was first confirmed by analyzing Nogo isoform expression in a transgenic ALS model at early asymptomatic stages where we found increased levels of Nogo-A and decreased Nogo-C and importantly, not following experimentally induced denervation. Furthermore, we confirmed these changes in both post-mortem and biopsy samples from diagnosed ALS patients but not control patients. Thus, the alteration in Nogo expression pattern, common to sporadic and familial ALS, represents a potential diagnosis tool and points strongly to Nogo having a central role in disease.