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Plasma metals as potential biomarkers in dementia: a case-control study in patients with sporadic Alzheimer's disease.

Authors :
Jingshu Xu
Church, Stephanie J.
Patassini, Stefano
Begley, Paul
Kellett, Katherine A. B.
Vardy, Emma R. L. C.
Unwin, Richard D.
Hooper, Nigel M.
Cooper, Garth J. S.
Source :
BioMetals; Apr2018, Vol. 31 Issue 2, p267-276, 10p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that causes the most prevalent form of age-related dementia but its pathogenesis remains obscure. Altered regulation of metals, particularly pan-cerebral copper deficiency, and more regionally-localized perturbation of othermetals, are prominent in AD brain although data on how these CNS perturbations are reflected in the peripheral bloodstream are inconsistent to date. To assess the potential use of metal dysregulation to generate biomarkers in AD, we performed a case-control study of seven essential metals and selenium, measured by inductively coupled plasmamassspectrometry, in samples from AD and matched control cases. Metals were sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, iron, zinc, and copper. In the whole study-group and in female participants, plasma metal levels did not differ between cases and controls. In males by contrast, there was moderate evidence that zinc levels trended towards increase inAD[10.8 (10.2-11.5)] lmol/L, mean (± 95% CI; P = 0.021) compared with controls [10.2 (9.6-10.4)]. Thus alterations in plasma zinc levels differed between genders inAD. In correlational analysis, there was evidence for an increased number of 'strong' metal co-regulations in AD cases and differential comodulations of metal pairs: copper-sodium (R<subscript>control-</subscript> = - 0.03, R<subscript>AD</subscript> = 0.65; P = 0.009), and copper-calcium (R<subscript>control</subscript> = - 0.01, R<subscript>AD</subscript> = 0.65; P = 0.01) were significant in AD males, potentially consistent with reported evidence for dysregulation of copper in severely damaged brain regions in AD. In conclusion, our data suggest that the measurement of metals co-regulation in plasma may provide a useful representation of those metal perturbations taking place in the AD brain and therefore might be useful as plasma-based biomarkers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09660844
Volume :
31
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BioMetals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128685035
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10534-018-0089-3